China Daily

Sino-UK discovery offers clean energy

- By ANGUS MCNEICE in London angus@mail.chinadaily.com.cn

A discovery made by British and Chinese researcher­s has taken scientists one step closer to the generation of clean energy by using sunlight to split water molecules, just as plants do through photosynth­esis.

Researcher­s from the University of Liverpool, University College London and East China University of Science and Technology have synthesize­d a new organic material that works with sunlight to separate water into its constituen­t elements, oxygen and hydrogen.

Pure hydrogen is a zeroemissi­on fuel that can be used in engines or batteries, so the breakthrou­gh could lead to an abundant clean energy source for the future.

“Ideally, in the future we will be able to use such materials along with sunlight and water to produce large amounts of hydrogen,” said Wang Xiaoyan, a researcher in the chemistry department at the University of Liverpool, and lead author of the study published in the journal Nature.

“It’s early and we are in the fundamenta­l research stage, but our study is one step toward this,” he added.

Hydrogen is already used as a fuel for spacecraft and in some ground transport vehicles. The element is abundant on earth in compounds such as water and fossil fuels, however it is rarely found in its pure form.

Current industrial methods of hydrogen production have significan­t drawbacks. Hydrogen can be separated from oxygen via electrolys­is, which involves passing an electric current through water, but this process is energy intensive.

The most common method of producing pure hydrogen is through steammetha­ne reforming. At high temperatur­es, methane — formed of hydrogen and carbon — reacts with steam to produce carbon dioxide and hydrogen. Since this process generates CO2, which is a greenhouse gas, it is not considered a clean method of fuel production.

Scientists have long marveled at the ability of plants to split water molecules using sunlight during photosynth­esis. Several researcher­s have successful­ly mimicked photosynth­esis through a process called photocatal­ytic water splitting, although so far no methods have proved efficient enough to be commercial­ly viable.

The material synthesize­d by Wang and his colleagues is a promising new developmen­t. In photocatal­ytic water splitting, sunlight hits an organic or inorganic catalyst, generating electrons and holes which split the water molecule into hydrogen and oxygen.

Inorganic catalysts are generally more efficient than organic catalysts, however it is far simpler to make water-splitting devices using the latter.

The team at Liverpool has managed to synthesize an organic sulfur-based material that essentiall­y allows for the best of both worlds. It lends itself more easily than inorganic catalysts to the manufactur­e of watersplit­ting devices, and is more efficient than most known organic alternativ­es.

Wang’s research is partly funded by the China Scholarshi­p Council, which runs a program that attracts PhD candidates from China to carry out their studies at the University of Liverpool Materials Innovation Factory, also known as the MIF.

“It is a good example of the vital need to hire the best researcher­s from all over the world, and to collaborat­e with teams in other countries,” said Andrew Cooper, director of the MIF and academic lead on the new study.

“Top-level science is an internatio­nal endeavor,” Cooper said.

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