Catalysts are required to speed up important processes in industrial chemistry, including drug manufacturing. Representative image.
| Photo Credit: Mina Rad/Unsplash
For more than a century, aluminium has been chemistry’s workhorse — useful, abundant, cheap, albeit limited in its abilities as a catalyst. New work reported in Nature may change that.
Transition metals such as palladium, rhodium, and platinum underpin some of the most important industrial chemical processes in the world. But they are rare and expensive. India’s pharmaceutical and agrochemical industries also depend on them.
The new study, by researchers at the Southern University of Science and Technology in Shenzhen, has suggested that aluminium, which is abundantly available in India, can be made to behave in the same way that makes those metals catalytically powerful, opening a potential path to cheaper alternatives.
Published – April 10, 2026 07:30 am IST
