PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Engineers teach old chemical new tricks to make cleaner fuels, fertilizers

Researchers from Denmark and Stanford show how to produce industrial quantities of hydrogen without emitting carbon into the atmosphere

2014-01-27
(Press-News.org) Contact information: Tom Abate
tabate@stanford.edu
650-736-2245
Stanford School of Engineering
Engineers teach old chemical new tricks to make cleaner fuels, fertilizers Researchers from Denmark and Stanford show how to produce industrial quantities of hydrogen without emitting carbon into the atmosphere

University researchers from two continents have engineered an efficient and environmentally friendly catalyst for the production of molecular hydrogen (H2), a compound used extensively in modern industry to manufacture fertilizer and refine crude oil into gasoline.

Although hydrogen is abundant element, it is generally not found as the pure gas H2but is generally bound to oxygen in water (H2O) or to carbon in methane (CH4), the primary component in natural gas. At present, industrial hydrogen is produced from natural gas using a process that consumes a great deal of energy while also releasing carbon into the atmosphere, thus contributing to global carbon emissions.

In an article published today (Jan. 26, 1300 EST) in Nature Chemistry, nanotechnology experts from Stanford Engineering and from Denmark's Aarhus University explain how to liberate hydrogen from water on an industrial scale by using electrolysis .

In electrolysis, electrical current flows through a metallic electrode immersed in water. This electron flow induces a chemical reaction that breaks the bonds between hydrogen and oxygen atoms. The electrode serves as a catalyst, a material that can spur one reaction after another without ever being used up. Platinum is the best catalyst for electrolysis. If cost were no object, platinum might be used to produce hydrogen from water today.

But money matters. The world consumes about 55 billion kilograms of hydrogen per year. It now costs about $1 to $2 per kilogram to produce hydrogen from methane. So any competing process, even if it's greener, must hit that production cost, which rules out electrolysis based on platinum.

In their Nature Chemistry paper, the researchers describe how they re-engineered the atomic structure of a cheap and common industrial material to make it nearly as efficient at electrolysis as platinum – a finding that has the potential to revolutionize industrial hydrogen production.

The project was conceived by Jakob Kibsgaard, a post-doctoral researcher with Thomas Jaramillo, an assistant professor of chemical engineering at Stanford. Kibsgaard started this project while working with Flemming Besenbacher, a professor at the Interdisciplinary Nanoscience Center (iNANO) at Aarhus.

Subhead: Meet Moly Sulfide

Since World War II petroleum engineers have used molybdenum sulfide – moly sulfide for short – to help refine oil.

Until now, however, this chemical was not considered a good catalyst for making moly sulfide to produce hydrogen from water through electrolysis. Eventually scientists and engineers came to understand why: the most commonly used moly sulfide materials had an unsuitable arrangement of atoms at their surface.

Typically, each sulfur atom on the surface of a moly sulfide crystal is bound to three molybdenum atoms underneath. For complex reasons involving the atomic bonding properties of hydrogen, that configuration isn't conducive to electrolysis.

In 2004, Stanford chemical engineering professor Jens Norskov, then at the Technical University of Denmark, made an important discovery. Around the edges of the crystal, some sulfur atoms are bound to just two molybdenum atoms. At these edge sites, which are characterized by double rather than triple bonds, moly sulfide was much more effective at forming H2.

Armed with that knowledge, Kibsgaard found a 30-year-old recipe for making a form of moly sulfide with lots of these double-bonded sulfurs at the edge.

Using simple chemistry, he synthesized nanoclusters of this special moly sulfide. He deposited these nanoclusters onto a sheet of graphite, a material that conducts electricity. Together the graphite and moly sulfide formed a cheap electrode. It was meant to be a substitute for platinum, the ideal but expensive catalyst for electrolysis.

The question then became: could this composite electrode efficiently spur the chemical reaction that rearranges hydrogen and oxygen atoms in water?

As Jaramillo put it: "Chemistry is all about where electrons want to go, and catalysis is about getting those electrons to move to make and break chemical bonds."

Subhead: The acid test

So the experimenters put their system to the acid test –- literally.

They immersed their composite electrode into water that was slightly acidified, meaning it contained positively charged hydrogen ions. These positive ions were attracted to the moly sulfide clusters. Their double-bonded shape gave them just the right atomic characteristic to pass electrons from the graphite conductor up to the positive ions. This electron transfer turned the positive ions into neutral molecular hydrogen, which bubbled up and away as a gas.

Most importantly, the experimenters found that their cheap, moly sulfide catalyst had the potential to liberate hydrogen from water on something approaching the efficiency of a system based on prohibitively expensive platinum.

Subhead: Yes, but does it scale?

But in chemical engineering, success in a beaker is only the beginning.

The larger questions were: could this technology scale to the 55 billion kilograms per year global demand for hydrogen, and at what finished cost per kilogram?

Last year, Jaramillo and a dozen co-authors studied four factory-scale production schemes in an article for The Royal Society of Chemistry's journal of Energy and Environmental Science.

They concluded that it could be feasible to produce hydrogen in factory-scale electrolysis facilities at costs ranging from $1.60 and $10.40 per kilogram – competitive at the low end with current practices based on methane -- though some of their assumptions were based on new plant designs and materials.

"There are many pieces of the puzzle still needed to make this work, and much effort ahead to realize them," Jaramillo said. "However, we can get huge returns by moving from carbon-intensive resources to renewable, sustainable technologies to produce the chemicals we need for food and energy."



INFORMATION:



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Sensitivity of carbon cycle to tropical temperature variations has doubled, research shows

2014-01-27
The tropical carbon cycle has become ...

Cleveland Clinic researchers discover process that turns 'good cholesterol' bad

2014-01-27
Cleveland: Cleveland Clinic researchers have discovered the process by ...

Shortening guide RNA markedly improves specificity of CRISPR-Cas nucleases

2014-01-27
A simple adjustment to a powerful gene-editing tool may be able to improve its specificity. In a report receiving advance online publication in Nature Biotechnology, Massachusetts ...

How does the brain create sequences?

2014-01-27
When you learn how to play the piano, first you have to learn notes, scales and chords and only then will you be able to play a piece of music. The same ...

Long-lived breast stem cells could retain cancer legacy

2014-01-27
Researchers from Melbourne's Walter and Eliza Hall Institute have discovered that breast stem cells and their 'daughters' have a much longer lifespan than previously thought, and are active in puberty ...

Music therapy's positive effects on young cancer patients' coping skills, social integration

2014-01-27
A new study has found that adolescents and young adults undergoing cancer treatment gain coping skills and resilience-related outcomes when they participate in a therapeutic music ...

Quality improvement initiative improves asthma outcomes in teens

2014-01-27
Researchers at Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center have successfully carried out what is believed to be the first initiative conducted exclusively among teenagers to show ...

After the gunshot: Hospitalizations for firearm injuries prevalent among children

2014-01-27
About 20 children per day in the United States are injured by firearms seriously enough to require hospitalization, and more than 6% of these children die from their injuries, according ...

Researchers motivate diabetics to adopt healthy lifestyle

2014-01-27
By means of so-called health coaching, researchers at the University of Copenhagen have helped a large group of diabetics to markedly improve their oral health. The patients assume responsibility for their ...

Highly reliable brain-imaging protocol identifies delays in premature infants

2014-01-25
Infants born prematurely are at elevated risk for cognitive, motor, and behavioral deficits — the severity of which was, until recently, almost impossible to ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Yo-yo dieting may significantly increase kidney disease risk in people with type 1 diabetes

Big cities fuel inequality

Financial comfort and prosociality

Painted lady butterflies migrations and genetics

Globetrotting not in the genes

Patient advocates from NCCN guidelines panels share their ‘united by unique’ stories for world cancer day

Innovative apatite nanoparticles for advancing the biocompatibility of implanted biodevices

Study debunks nuclear test misinformation following 2024 Iran earthquake

Quantum machine offers peek into “dance” of cosmic bubbles

How hungry fat cells could someday starve cancer to death

Breakthrough in childhood brain cancer research could heal treatment-resistant tumors, keep them in remission

Research discovery halts childhood brain tumor before it forms

Scientists want to throw a wrench in the gears of cancer’s growth

WSU researcher pioneers new study model with clues to anti-aging

EU awards €5 grant to 18 international researchers in critical raw materials, the “21st century's gold”

FRONTIERS launches dedicated call for early-career science journalists

Why do plants transport energy so efficiently and quickly?

AI boosts employee work experiences

Neurogenetics leader decodes trauma's imprint on the brain through groundbreaking PTSD research

High PM2.5 levels in Delhi-NCR largely independent of Punjab-Haryana crop fires

Discovery of water droplet freezing steps bridges atmospheric science, climate solutions

Positive emotions plus deep sleep equals longer-lasting perceptual memories

Self-assembling cerebral blood vessels: A breakthrough in Alzheimer’s treatment

Adverse childhood experiences in firstborns associated with poor mental health of siblings

Montana State scientists publish new research on ancient life found in Yellowstone hot springs

Generative AI bias poses risk to democratic values

Study examines how African farmers are adapting to mountain climate change

Exposure to air pollution associated with more hospital admissions for lower respiratory infections

Microscopy approach offers new way to study cancer therapeutics at single-cell level

How flooding soybeans in early reproductive stages impacts yield, seed composition

[Press-News.org] Engineers teach old chemical new tricks to make cleaner fuels, fertilizers
Researchers from Denmark and Stanford show how to produce industrial quantities of hydrogen without emitting carbon into the atmosphere