From: New Scientist
Published February 18, 2009 09:24 AM
Sun-powered device converts CO2 into fuel
Powered only by natural sunlight, an array of nanotubes is able to
convert a mixture of carbon dioxide and water vapour into natural gas at
unprecedented rates.
Such devices offer a new way to take carbon dioxide from the atmosphere and
convert it into fuel or other chemicals to cut the effect of fossil fuel
emissions onglobal climate, says Craig Grimes, from Pennsylvania State
University, whose team came up with the device.
Although other research groups have developed methods for converting
carbon dioxide into organic compounds like methane, often using
titanium-dioxide nanoparticles as catalysts, they have needed ultraviolet
light to power the reactions.
The researchers' breakthrough has been to develop a method that works with
the wider range of visible frequencies within sunlight.
Enhanced activity
The team found it could enhance the catalytic abilities of titanium dioxide
by forming it into nanotubes each around 135 nanometres wide and 40 microns
long to increase surface area. Coating the nanotubes with catalytic copper
and platinum particles also boosted their activity.
The researchers housed a 2-centimetre-square section of material bristling
with the tubes inside a metal chamber with a quartz window. They then pumped
in a mixture of carbon dioxide and water vapour and placed it in sunlight
for three hours.
The energy provided by the sunlight transformed the carbon dioxide and water
vapour into methane and related organic compounds, such as ethane and
propane, at rates as high as 160 microlitres an hour per gram of nanotubes.
This is 20 times higher than published results achieved using any previous
method, but still too low to be immediately practical.
If the reaction is halted early the device produces a mixture of carbon
monoxide and hydrogen known as syngas, which can be converted into diesel.
Copper boost
"If you tried to build a commercial system using what we have accomplished
to date, you'd go broke," admits Grimes. But he is confident that
commercially viable results are possible.
"We are now working on uniformly sensitising the entire nanotube array
surface with copper nanoparticles, which should dramatically increase
conversion rates," says Grimes, by at least two orders of magnitude for a
given area of tubes.
This work suggests a "potentially very exciting" application for
titanium-dioxide nanotubes, says Milo Shaffer, a nanotube researcher at
Imperial College, London. "The high surface area, small critical dimensions,
and open structure [of these nanotubes] apparently provide a relatively high
activity," he says.
Journal Reference:
Nano Letters
(DOI: 10.1021/nl803258p)
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