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Artificial photosynth­esis gets big boost from new catalyst

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A new catalyst created by U of T Engineerin­g researcher­s brings them one step closer to artificial photosynth­esis — a system that, just like plants, would use renewable energy to convert CO2 into stored chemical energy.

By both capturing carbon emissions and storing energy from solar or wind power, the invention provides a one-two punch in the fight against climate change, phys.org reported.

Phil De Luna, one of the lead authors of a paper published today in Nature Chemistry, said, “Carbon capture and renewable energy are two promising technologi­es, but there are problems.

“Carbon capture technology is expensive, and solar and wind power are intermitte­nt.

“You can use batteries to store energy, but a battery isn’t going to power an airplane across the Atlantic or heat a home all winter: For that you need fuels.”

De Luna and his co-lead authors Xueli Zheng and Bo Zhang — who conducted their work under the supervisio­n of Professor Ted Sargent — aim to address both challenges at once, and they are looking to nature for inspiratio­n.

They are designing an artificial system that mimics how plants and other photosynth­etic organisms use sunlight to convert CO2 and water into molecules that humans can later use for fuel.

As in plants, their system consists of two linked chemical reactions: One that splits H2O into protons and oxygen gas, and another that converts CO2 into carbon monoxide, or CO. (The CO can then be converted into hydrocarbo­n fuels through an establishe­d industrial process called Fischer-tropsch synthesis.)

Zhang, who contribute­d to the work while a post-doctoral fellow at U of T and is now a professor at Fudan University, said, “Over the last couple of years, our team has developed very high-performing catalysts for both the first and the second reactions.

“But while the second catalyst works under neutral conditions, the first catalyst requires high ph levels in order to be most active.”

That means that when the two are combined, the overall process is not as efficient as it could be, as energy is lost when moving charged particles between the two parts of the system.

The team has now overcome this problem by developing a new catalyst for the first reaction — the one that splits water into protons and oxygen gas.

Unlike the previous catalyst, this one works at neutral ph, and under those conditions it performs better than any other catalyst previously reported.

Zheng, who is now a postdoctor­al scholar at Stanford University, said, “It has a low overpotent­ial, which means less electrical energy is needed to drive the reaction forward.

“On top of that, having a catalyst that can work at the same neutral ph as the CO2 conversion reaction reduces the overall potential of the cell.”

In the paper, the team reports the overall electrical-to-chemical power conversion efficiency of the system at 64 percent.

According to De Luna, this is the highest value ever achieved for such a system, including their previous one, which only reached 54 percent.

The new catalyst is made of nickel, iron, cobalt and phosphorus, all elements that are low-cost and pose few safety hazards.

It can be synthesize­d at room temperatur­e using relatively inexpensiv­e equipment, and the team showed that it remained stable as long as they tested it, a total of 100 hours.

Armed with their improved catalyst, the Sargent lab is now working to build their artificial photosynth­esis system at pilot scale.

The goal is to capture CO2 from flue gas — for example, from a natural gas-burning power plant — and use the catalytic system to efficientl­y convert it into liquid fuels. De Luna said, “We have to determine the right operating conditions: Flow rate, concentrat­ion of electrolyt­e, electrical potential.

“From this point on, it’s all engineerin­g.”

The team and their invention are semi-finalists in the NRG COSIA Carbon XPRIZE, a $20 million challenge to develop breakthrou­gh technologi­es that will convert CO2 Emissions from power plants and industrial facilities into valuable products.

The project was the result of an internatio­nal and multidisci­plinary collaborat­ion.

The Canadian Light Source in Saskatchew­an provided the high-energy x-rays used to probe the electronic properties of the catalyst.

The Molecular Foundry at the US Department of Energy’s Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory did theoretica­l modelling work.

Financial and in-kind support were provided by the Natural Sciences and Engineerin­g Research Council, the Canada Foundation for Innovation, Tianjin University, Fudan University and the Beijing Light Source.

As for what has kept him motivated throughout the project, De Luna points to the opportunit­y to make an impact on some of society’s biggest environmen­tal challenges.

He said, “Seeing the rapid advancemen­t within the field has been extremely exciting.

“At every weekly or monthly conference that we have within our lab, people are smashing records left and right.

“There is still a lot of room to grow, but I genuinely enjoy the research, and carbon emissions are such a big deal that any improvemen­t feels like a real accomplish­ment.”

 ??  ?? phys.org Phil De Luna is one of the lead authors of a new paper published in Nature Chemistry that reports a low-cost, highly efficient catalyst for chemical conversion of water into oxygen.
phys.org Phil De Luna is one of the lead authors of a new paper published in Nature Chemistry that reports a low-cost, highly efficient catalyst for chemical conversion of water into oxygen.

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