At the Straubing site, the focus is on establishing a research infrastructure based on CO2 and renewable H2 (or synthesis gases from renewable sources) for the production of synthetic fuels. The synthesis route involves the intermediate steps of methanol synthesis, alcohol dehydration—such as methanol-to-hydrocarbons (MtH) or ethanol dehydration—and oligomerization, followed by the subsequent hydrogenation of (light) hydrocarbons.
The ZENK platform's research strand begins in the chemical-technical laboratory with the investigation of microkinetics, catalyst activity, and the use of raw materials from real (industrial) sources. This is followed by initial scaling in the laboratory, during which scaling effects such as temperature profiles and real catalyst fillings are understood.
Finally, the heterogeneously catalyzed processes are transferred to the ZENK pilot plant at the new Straubing-Sand facility, which provides pre-industrial data for process control on a kilogram-per-hour production scale. In 2025, the creation of the laboratory infrastructure was largely complete and the basic engineering of the free-standing pilot plant, including the HAZOP study, had been finalized.