Paper releasing gaseous hydrogen under solar light

A team of scientists at the 探花直播 of Cambridge has developed a way of using solar power to generate a fuel that is both sustainable and relatively cheap to produce. It鈥檚 using natural light to generate hydrogen from biomass.

Our sunlight powered technology is exciting as it enables the production of clean hydrogen from unprocessed biomass under ambient conditions

Dr Erwin Reisner

One of the challenges facing modern society is what it does with its waste products. As natural resources decline in abundance, using waste for energy is becoming more pressing for both governments and business.

Biomass has been a source of heat and energy since the beginning of recorded history.听 探花直播planet鈥檚 oil reserves are derived from ancient biomass which has been subjected to high pressures and temperatures over millions of years. Lignocellulose is the main component of plant biomass and up to now its conversion into hydrogen has only been achieved through a gasification process which uses high temperatures to decompose it fully. 听

Dr Moritz Kuehnel, from the Department of Chemistry at the 探花直播 of Cambridge, joint lead author on a new research paper published in Nature Energy, says:

"Lignocellulose is nature's equivalent to armoured concrete. It consists of strong, highly crystalline cellulose fibres, that are interwoven with lignin and hemicellulose which act as a glue. This rigid structure has evolved to give plants and trees mechanical stability and protect them from degradation, and makes chemical utilisation of lignocellulose so challenging."

探花直播new technology relies on a simple photocatalytic conversion process. Catalytic nanoparticles are added to alkaline water in which the biomass is suspended. This is then placed in front of a light in the lab which mimics solar light. 探花直播solution is ideal for absorbing this light and converting the biomass into gaseous hydrogen which can then be collected from the headspace. 探花直播hydrogen is free of fuel-cell inhibitors, such as carbon monoxide, which allows it to be used for power.

探花直播nanoparticle is able to absorb energy from solar light and use it to undertake complex chemical reactions. In this case, it rearranges the atoms in the water and biomass to form hydrogen fuel and other organic chemicals, such as formic acid and carbonate.

Joint lead author, Dr David Wakerley, also of the Department of Chemistry, says:

鈥淭here鈥檚 a lot of chemical energy stored in raw biomass, but it鈥檚 unrefined, so you can鈥檛 expect it to work in complicated machinery, such as a car engine. Our system is able to convert the long, messy structures that make up biomass into hydrogen gas, which is much more useful. We have specifically designed a combination of catalyst and solution that allows this transformation to occur using sunlight as a source of energy. With this in place we can simply add organic matter to the system and then, provided it鈥檚 a sunny day, produce hydrogen fuel.鈥

A piece of paper placed in front of a solar light source

探花直播team used different types of biomass in their experiments. Pieces of wood, paper and leaves were placed in test tubes and exposed to solar light. 探花直播biomass didn鈥檛 require any processing beforehand.

探花直播technology was developed in the Christian Doppler Laboratory for Sustainable SynGas Chemistry at the 探花直播 of Cambridge. 探花直播head of the laboratory, Dr. Erwin Reisner, adds:

鈥淥ur sunlight-powered technology is exciting as it enables the production of clean hydrogen from unprocessed biomass under ambient conditions. We see it as a new and viable alternative to high temperature gasification and other renewable means of hydrogen production.

Future development can be envisioned at any scale, from small scale devices for off-grid applications to industrial-scale plants, and we are currently exploring a range of potential commercial options."

With the help of Cambridge Enterprise, the commercialisation arm of the 探花直播, a UK patent application has been filed and talks are under way with a potential commercial partner.

Reference

David Wakerley et al:

Nature Energy 13th March 2017听DOI: 10.1038/nenergy.2017.21



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