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- More Advances in Producing Inexpensive Hydrogen
- Energy Use of Different Modes of Transport {Infographic}
- IEA: 2010 Carbon Emissions Highest in History
| More Advances in Producing Inexpensive Hydrogen Posted: 31 May 2011 09:05 AM PDT There is now more good news out on producing hydrogen, the clean-burning fuel that leaves behind water as an emission. An international scientific team has announced that it can create hydrogen using ambient temperatures and pressure through a combination of sunlight and ethanol. This news has been reported in Nature Chemistry. The research team hails from Spain’s Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya, Scotland’s University of Aberdeen, and New Zealand’s University of Auckland. The team's research concludes that this method for producing hydrogen is potentially cheaper and can produce a higher yield. The news is important because standard hydrogen production today requires high temperatures and pressure, thus demanding a considerable amount of energy, which is generally obtained from fossil fuels. The net result: while hydrogen is very appealing because it is a clean fuel, producing it has traditionally been too costly to have appeal in the marketplace and actually relies on dirty energy. Jordi Llorca, director of the Institute of Energy Technology and researcher at the Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya’s Nanoengineering Research Centre, is one of the authors of the study, which represents a major step towards using hydrogen as an alternative to fossil fuels. In the framework of the research, a fully scalable powder photocatalyst was created that makes the hydrogen production process simpler and cheaper as it takes place at ambient temperature and pressure. As reported by Science News, the process that was reported uses a powdered photo catalyst and ethanol in a container. The mixture is agitated and exposed to ultraviolet light from the sun. A titanium dioxide semiconductor within the container generates electrons when exposed to the light, and those electrons are captured by metallic gold nanoparticles in the catalyst. Those captured electrons proceed to react with the ethanol’s alcohol molecules and produce hydrogen. The researchers say they have been able to produce up to five liters of hydrogen per kilogram of catalyst (1.32 U.S. gallons per 2.2 pounds) within in one minute. Because no high temperatures or pressures are required, the system uses less energy than conventional methods. This is not the first time that sunlight has been used to generate hydrogen, writes gizmag, which reported in February on another discovery at the Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL). The team reports it is now looking at designing reactors that can generate hydrogen to produce electricity for homes. Image & Caption Credit: Wikimedia user Pumbaa (original work by Greg Robson) |
| Energy Use of Different Modes of Transport {Infographic} Posted: 31 May 2011 03:32 AM PDT Transportation is a leading cause of greenhouse gas emissions. Of course, automobiles and planes and our dependency on them are large reasons for that, especially here in the U.S. where transportation accounts for an even larger piece of our emissions pie compared to other countries. Learn more about the energy use or energy efficiency of various modes of transport in the info graphic and article below, republished from our sister site, Planetsave.
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| IEA: 2010 Carbon Emissions Highest in History Posted: 31 May 2011 03:24 AM PDT |
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