September 08, 2023
By UNIVERSITY OF COLORADO AT BOULDER
Scientists Develop New More Efficient Method
to Produce Green Hydrogen
Researchers from the University of Colorado have discovered a more
efficient method to produce green hydrogen and syngas using solar
energy.
This sustainable approach can potentially revolutionize energy use in
various industries.
Scientists from the University
of Colorado have developed a new and efficient way to produce
green hydrogen or green syngas, a precursor to liquid fuels. This
breakthrough has the potential to pave the way for a greener approach
to energy consumption in sectors such as transportation, steel
manufacturing, and ammonia production.
The new study, recently published in the journal Joule,
focuses on the production of hydrogen or syngas, a mixture of hydrogen
and carbon monoxide that can be converted into fuels like gasoline,
diesel, and kerosene. The CU Boulder team lays the groundwork for what
could be the first commercially viable method for producing this fuel,
entirely using solar energy. That might help engineers to generate
syngas in a more sustainable way.
The group was led by Al Weimer, a professor in the Department of
Chemical and Biological Engineering.
“The way I like to think about it is someday when you go to the pump
you’ll have, for example, unleaded, super unleaded, and ethanol
options, and then an additional option being solar fuel, where the
fuel is derived from sunlight, water and carbon dioxide,” said Kent
Warren, one of two lead authors of the new study and a research
associate in Chemical and Biological Engineering. “Our hope is that it
will be cost-competitive to the fuels sourced from the ground.”
Traditionally, engineers produce hydrogen gas through electrolysis, or
using electricity to split molecules of water into hydrogen and oxygen
gas. The team’s “thermochemical” approach, in contrast, uses heat
generated by solar rays to complete those same chemical reactions. The
methods can also split molecules of carbon dioxide pulled from the
atmosphere to produce carbon monoxide.
Scientists had previously shown that such an approach to making
hydrogen and carbon monoxide was possible, but might not be efficient
enough to produce syngas in a commercially viable manner. In the new
study, the researchers demonstrated that they can conduct these
reactions at elevated pressures, in part by employing iron-aluminate
materials, which are relatively inexpensive and abundant on the Earth.
Those higher pressures allowed the team to more than double its
production of hydrogen.
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