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University makes hand sanitiser to support Birmingham City Council frontline staff

The University of Birmingham is playing a vital role in helping to respond to a shortage of hand sanitiser needed by frontline social care workers to prevent the spread of the Coronavirus.

Hand sanitiser

The University of Birmingham is playing a vital role in helping to respond to a shortage of hand sanitiser needed by frontline social care workers to prevent the spread of the Coronavirus.

At the request of Public Health England, a team of technicians are working at the University’s flagship Collaborative Teaching Laboratory (CTL) to produce urgently needed hand sanitiser for Birmingham’s social care workers. The sanitiser is being sent to Birmingham City Council's Council House to be decanted into individual bottles and distributed to front-line staff.

(Filmed before lockdown measures came into effect)

Professor Andy Schofield, Pro-Vice Chancellor and Head of the College of Engineering and Physical Sciences, said: “We are working hard to deploy the University’s expertise and resources in a variety of ways to respond to the COVID-19 pandemic, including analysing the virus and its epidemiology.

“We are also fortunate to have world class facilities, such as our flagship Collaborative Teaching Laboratory, in which we train students in chemistry, chemical engineering, and wider engineering disciplines and formulate a wide variety of products including those found in the household.

“In response to the pandemic, and as part of our responsibilities as a Civic University, we are converting this facility to produce hand sanitiser for those working on the frontline to prevent the transmission of the virus by ensuring they can keep their hands clean.”

Dr Emma Melia, Director of Operations at the University of Birmingham’s College of Engineering and Physical Sciences, said: “Our technicians have been asked by Public Health England to help produce hand sanitiser for social care workers who are working with the vulnerable and elderly but are running short of supplies.

“We have gathered our supplies across campus of Isopropyl Alcohol, Ethanol, Hydrogen Peroxide and Glycerol to make hand sanitiser in line with the World Health Organization’s guidelines and we are working rapidly to get the first batches out.”

The University’s flagship Collaborative Teaching Laboratory was opened by 2016 Nobel Laureate Professor Sir Fraser Stoddart in May last year at a special event.

Bringing together practical teaching activities across a broad range of science and engineering disciplines, the Collaborative Teaching Laboratory incorporates a wet lab, dry lab and e-lab. It allows students to experience the environments they are likely to encounter in industry. 

  • For media enquiries please contact Beck Lockwood, Press Office, University of Birmingham, tel: +44 (0)781 3343348: email: r.lockwood@bham.ac.uk
  •  Professor Sir Fraser Stoddart was Head of the School of Chemistry at the University of Birmingham between 1993 and 1997. In 2016 he was awarded a Nobel Prize in Chemistry for ground-breaking work he carried out with a group of academic colleagues.
  • The CTL’s layout marks a move away from discipline-specific laboratories, with the aim of supporting a convergence of science and engineering based subjects, and fostering co-innovation. The CTL was built by construction and infrastructure company Morgan Sindall and designed by architect Sheppard Robson.
  • The University of Birmingham is ranked amongst the world’s top 100 institutions. Its work brings people from across the world to Birmingham, including researchers, teachers and more than 6,500 international students from over 150 countries.