Belén Altava is a researcher at the Department of Inorganic and Organic Chemistry, Jaume I University (Castellon, Spain). She completed her Ph.D. studies in Inorganic and Organic at the Jaume I University. Her research interests include the design of organometallic catalysts and organocatalysts for CO2 activation/valorization; supported catalysts; flow chemistry and ionic liquids; supramolecular catalysts; and the design of nanocarriers (gels and vesicles) for drug delivery.
Francisco G. Cirujano completed a BSc in Chemistry (Universidad de Alicante, 2005–2010) and an MSc and Ph.D. in Sustainable Chemistry (ITQ-Universidad Politécnica de Valencia, 2010–2016). After a postdoctoral stay as a Marie Curie fellow in Belgium (cMACS-KU-Leuven, 2016–2019) and a Junior Leader La Caixa position (ICMOL-Universidad de Valencia, 2019–2022), he currently serves as a Ramón y Cajal researcher at the Inorganic and Organic Chemistry department of the Universitat Jaume I. He has participated in more than 10 international research projects and published more than 50 scientific articles, reviews, and book chapters in the fields of porous metal–organic polymers and heterogeneous catalysis.
Eduardo García-Verdugo is a professor at the Department of Inorganic and Organic Chemistry, University Jaume I (Castellón, Spain). He completed his Ph.D. studies in Chemistry at the University Jaume I (Castellón, Spain) and earned a Marie Curie Fellowship postdoctoral award at Nottingham University (Nottingham, UK). He recently served as Project Technical Advisor (PTA), not only assisting EC staff during the review of running projects funded under Framework Programme 7 but also with other supporting tasks related to these projects. His research interests include green chemistry and catalysts.