Published: 16:24 EST,
May 01, 2007
Cheap source of energy: Cell splits
water via sunlight to produce hydrogen
By Tony Fitzpatrick
Pratim Biswas and his group have developed a
method to make a variety of oxide semiconductors
that, when put into water promote chemical reactions
that split water into hydrogen and oxygen. The
method provides a new low cost and efficient option
for hydrogen production. Credit: David Kilper/WUSTL
Photo
Engineers at Washington University in St. Louis have
developed a unique photocatalytic cell that splits water
to produce hydrogen and oxygen in water using sunlight
and the power of a nanostructured catalyst.
The group is developing novel methodologies
for synthesis of nanostructured films with superior opto-electronic
properties. One of the methods, which sandwiches three semiconductor films
into a compact structure on the nanoscale range, is smaller, more efficient
and more stable than present photocatalytic methods, which require multiple
steps and can take from several hours to a day to complete.
The discovery provides a new, low-cost and efficient option for
hydrogen production and can be used for a variety of distributed energy
applications.
Pratim Biswas, Ph.D., the Stifel and Quinette Jens Professor and Chair of
the Department of Energy, Environmental and
Chemical Engineering, and his graduate student Elijah Thimsen, recently
have developed the well-controlled, gas phase process, and have demonstrated
it for synthesizing a variety of oxide semiconductors such as iron and
titanium dioxide films in a single step process. It is based on a simple,
inexpensive flame aerosol reactor (FLAR) and consists of four mass flow
controllers to regulate process gases, a standard bubbler to deliver a
precursor, a metal tube that acts as a burner and a water-cooled substrate
holder.
"We put these films in water and they promote some reactions that split
water into hydrogen and oxygen," said Biswas. "We can use any oxide
materials such as titanium dioxide, tungsten oxide and iron oxide in
nanostructures sandwiched together that make very compact structures. The
process is direct and takes only a few minutes to fabricate. More important,
these processes can be scaled up to produce larger structures in a very cost
effective manner in atmospheric pressure processes."
Collaborations have now been established with Dewey Holten, Ph.D.,
Washington University professor of chemistry in Arts & Sciences, to better
understand the electron-hole pair kinetics, information that can then be
used to tune the synthesis process. Other collaborations with Robert
Blankenship, Ph.D., Washington University professor of biology and chemistry
in Arts & Sciences, are being explored to create hybrid bio-nanostructures
that will improve the light absorption efficiencies over a broader range of
wavelengths. Electrospray and other aerosol techniques are being used to
create these hybrid films.
The method was described in a recent
issue of SPIE, a publication of the International Society for Optical
Engineering.
The research is among the first wave of news out of the new Washington
University Department of Energy, Environmental and Chemical Engineering,
which performs research on energy and environment, including alternative
fuels and energy sources, air quality research, nanoparticle technology and
particle emission control, among other topics.
Some of the department faculty — 14 members now, expected to double in five
to ten years — are active in the University's ambitious BioEnergy
Initiative, which is focused on the development of technologies for the
production of next generation biofuels. The adoption of a systems approach
will not only enable development processes for large volume production of
liquid fuels from plant-based sources, but also at a low cost, and most
importantly, in an environmentally benign manner — not only during the
production, but also during the actual usage.
Source: Washington University in St. Louis |