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

Making hydrogen energy with the common nickel

Making hydrogen energy with the common nickel
2021-01-12
(Press-News.org) To resolve the energy crisis and environmental issues, research to move away from fossil fuels and convert to eco-friendly and sustainable hydrogen energy is well underway around the world. Recently, a team of researchers at POSTECH has proposed a way to efficiently produce hydrogen fuel via water-electrolysis using inexpensive and readily available nickel as an electrocatalyst, greenlighting the era of hydrogen economy.

A POSTECH research team led by Professor Jong Kyu Kim and Ph.D. candidate Jaerim Kim of the Department of Materials Science and Engineering and a team led by Professor Jeong Woo Han and Ph.D. candidate Hyeonjung Jung of the Department of Chemical Engineering have jointly developed a highly efficient nickel-based catalyst system doped with oxophilic transition metal atoms and have identified the correlation between catalytic adsorption properties and hydrogen evolution reaction (HER) kinetics in alkaline medium. Recognized for their significance, these research findings were featured as the front cover paper for the Journal of the American Chemical Society.

Fuel cell is an eco-friendly power generating device that produces electricity using a chemical reaction in which oxygen (O?) and hydrogen (H?) produce water (H?O). During this process, water electrolysis reduction occurs as a counter-reaction, which dissociates water to generate hydrogen fuel. This is known to be the most environmentally-safe and sustainable way to produce high-purity hydrogen fuel in large quantities. However, it has a downside of being costly and inefficient since it requires the use of precious metals as electrodes. In order to reduce the unit cost of hydrogen fuel produced through water-electrolysis, it is paramount to develop highly active, stable, and inexpensive electrochemical catalyst, capable of maximizing the hydrogen production performance.

To this, the joint research team designed a highly effective catalyst by combining earth-abundant nickel with a series of oxophilic transition metal elements to optimize the adsorption abilities in alkaline HER. The team further demonstrated that the incorporation of oxophilic dopants can effectively control the adsorption properties of the surface of Ni-based catalysts.

In order to further enhance the HER activity of the Ni-based catalysts, the researchers introduced a unique 3-dimentional (3D) nanohelix (NH) array, easily fabricated by an oblique-angle codeposition method, for abundant surface active sites, efficient pathways for charge transfer, and open channels for mass transport. They had successfully fabricated highly active and stable Cr-incorporated Ni NHs catalyst showing an excellent hydrogen production efficiency with reduced overvoltage more than four times compared to the conventional nickel-based thin film catalysts.

"This research is significant in that it provides the scholarly foundation for high performance and commercialization of sustainable hydrogen energy conversion system," explained Professor Jong Kyu Kim, the corresponding author of the paper. "The core concepts of the design strategy and experimental methodology for efficient bimetallic electrocatalysts can be applied not only to water electrolysers, but also to fuel cells, carbon dioxide reduction, and photo-electrochemical system. It is anticipated that securing this original technology will have significant ripple effects and technological expansion in the environmental energy sector."

Professor Jeong Woo Han, the co-corresponding author of the paper, added, "Computational chemistry has dramatically accelerated the water electrolysis reaction by quickly finding bimetals that can control the catalyst adsorption strength to enable the fabrication of bimetallic electrocatalysts using only nonprecious materials."

INFORMATION:

This research was conducted with the support from the Hydrogen Energy Innovation Technology Development program, Mid-career Researcher Program, Creative Materials Discovery Program funded by the National Research Foundation of Korea.


[Attachments] See images for this press release:
Making hydrogen energy with the common nickel

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

New functions of integrin and talin discovered by an international research network

2021-01-12
Researchers at Tampere University, Finland, have published new results in collaboration with an international research network that help to understand the biological phenomena mediated by cell membrane integrin receptors and contribute to the development of methods for the treatment of cancer. In the cell membrane, integrins form the connection between the cytoskeleton and the extracellular matrix. The regulation of integrin activity is essential for the function of tissues and individual cells. The studies investigated the structure and function of talin, a cytoskeletal protein, which is important in the regulation of the integrin receptor activity. Talin binds to integrin via its "head" and connects it to the cytoskeleton, thereby acting as a part of the ...

Rising health risks mean stronger regulations needed for smokeless tobacco

2021-01-12
Researchers at the University of York are calling for more stringent regulatory measures to reduce the health burden of smokeless tobacco, a product often found in UK stores without the proper health warnings and as a result of illicit trading. Smokeless tobacco is particularly popular in Asia and Africa and includes chewing tobacco as well as various types of nasal tobacco. They contain high levels of nicotine as well as cancer producing toxic chemicals, making head and neck cancers common in those who consume smokeless tobacco products. In a study of 25 wards across five boroughs - Birmingham, Bradford, Blackburn, Leicester, and ...

SUTD develops new model of influence maximization

SUTD develops new model of influence maximization
2021-01-12
If you were an owner of a newly set-up company, you would most likely be focused on building brand awareness to reach out to as many people as possible. But how can you do so with budget constraints? These days, businesses have turned to a select group of people who are active on social media platforms as a cost efficient way to drive their promotional efforts. Also referred to as 'influencers', they have the ability to influence the opinions or buying decisions of others. The company would then focus their efforts on influencing the influencers, hoping that, in turn, their product information gets disseminated to the largest possible number of people through these influencers' wide ...

Hope for children with rare heart condition: novel stem cell therapy to save the day

Hope for children with rare heart condition: novel stem cell therapy to save the day
2021-01-12
Dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) is a condition caused by the weakening of the heart muscle, affecting the ventricles (chambers in the heart that push blood around the body as it contracts). If allowed to progress unchecked, DCM can lead to heart failure and death, especially in children. The only cure, at present, is a heart transplant, which comes with its own challenges: long waiting times to secure a suitable donor heart, the possibility of organ rejection, long hospitalizations and recovery times, among others. In recent decades, stem cells have become the cornerstone ...

Sustainable transportation: clearing the air on nitrogen doping

Sustainable transportation: clearing the air on nitrogen doping
2021-01-12
Tsukuba, Japan - Proton-exchange membrane (PEM) fuel cells are an energy storage technology that will help lower the environmental footprint of transportation. These fuel cells make use of a chemical reaction known as oxygen reduction. This reaction needs a low-cost catalyst for widespread commercial applications. Nitrogen-doped carbon is one such catalyst, but the chemical details of how nitrogen doping works are rather controversial. Such knowledge is important to improving the function of PEM fuel cells in future technologies. In a study recently published in Angewandte Chemie International Edition, researchers ...

Low fitness linked to higher psoriasis risk later in life

Low fitness linked to higher psoriasis risk later in life
2021-01-12
In a major register-based study, scientists at University of Gothenburg, Sweden, have now demonstrated a connection between inferior physical fitness in young adults and elevated risk of the autoimmune disease psoriasis. For the male recruits to compulsory military training who were rated as the least fit, the risk of developing psoriasis later was 35 percent higher than for the fittest. The study was based on data on more than 1.2 million men conscripted, aged 18, into the Swedish Armed Forces between the years 1968 and 2005. During the enrollment ...

The three days pregnancy sickness is most likely to start pinpointed

2021-01-12
Nausea and vomiting symptoms during pregnancy start within a three day timeframe for most women, according to new study from University of Warwick More accurate measurement achieved by calculating start of pregnancy from date of ovulation - rather than last menstrual period Points to a potential biological cause for nausea and vomiting, and supports the view that the condition has been trivialised Researchers from the University of Warwick have narrowed the time frame that nausea and vomiting during pregnancy will potentially start to just three days for most women, opening up the possibility for scientists to identify ...

Like plants do: non-classical photosynthesis by earth's inorganic semiconducting minerals

Like plants do: non-classical photosynthesis by earths inorganic semiconducting minerals
2021-01-12
Photosynthesis, the process by which plants and other organisms convert sunlight into chemical energy, has been a major player during the evolution of life and our planet's atmosphere. Although most of the ins and outs of photosynthesis are understood, how the necessary mechanisms evolved is still a topic of debate. The answer to this question, however, may actually lie buried in the mineral world. In a recent study published in Earth Science Frontiers (10.13745/j.esf.sf.2020.12.3), scientists from Peking University, China, shifted the focus in photosynthesis research from plants and bacteria one step further back to rocks and substances found in what's ...

UK government must urgently rethink lateral flow test roll out, warn experts

2021-01-12
UK government plans to widen the roll out of the Innova lateral flow test without supporting evidence risks serious harm, warn experts in The BMJ today. More than £1 billion have been spent on purchasing lateral flow tests, but Professor Jon Deeks and colleagues argue that the public is being misled about their accuracy, as well as the risks and implications of false negative results, and they call on the government urgently to change course. Mass testing may be helpful and necessary in certain circumstances if delivered to high quality, they explain, but the Innova lateral flow test is not fit for this purpose. For example, in the Liverpool pilot study, 60% of infected symptomless people went undetected, including 33% of those with ...

UCLA scientists develop method to more efficiently isolate and identify rare T cells

UCLA scientists develop method to more efficiently isolate and identify rare T cells
2021-01-12
Scientists from the Eli and Edythe Broad Center of Regenerative Medicine and Stem Cell Research at UCLA have developed a technique that will enable researchers to more efficiently isolate and identify rare T cells that are capable of targeting viruses, cancer and other diseases. The approach could increase scientists' understanding of how these critical immune cells respond to a wide range of illnesses and advance the development of T cell therapies. This includes immunotherapies that aim to boost the function and quantity of cancer or virus-targeting T cells and therapies ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Protein found to be key in blood vessel healing after surgical injury

FAPESP Day Uruguay symposium begins tomorrow in Montevideo

Clinical trial in Africa finds single-dose malaria treatment combining four existing drugs as effective as more onerous multi-day, multi-dose regimen

New drug protects mitochondria and prevents kidney injury in mice

Mental and physical coaching before surgery prepares immune system, reduces complications

Bacteria spin rainbow-colored, sustainable textiles

First confirmed sighting of giant explosion on nearby star

Opening the door to affordable lab-grown beef, cow cells defy aging

New lightweight polymer film can prevent corrosion

Postpandemic recovery of case mix index and risk-adjusted mortality in US hospitals

Functional somatic disorders in individuals with a history of sexual assault

Variety of animals evolved similar genetics solutions to survive on land, study finds

Nature versus nurture question addressed in landmark study

AI can deliver personalized learning at scale, study shows

Study: Plant-based diet can prevent, reverse form of heart disease in animals with hypertension

Lower LRIG1 expression linked to aggressive gliomas

National consortium project led by TU Delft receives huge grant from NWO to build world's largest research digital twins for energy systems

Intranasal oxytocin and physical intimacy for dermatological wound healing and neuroendocrine stress

JMIR Publications partners with Signals to strengthen research integrity across its portfolio

Scientists make dark exciton states shine, unlocking new frontiers for nanotechnology

Glenn Foundation for Medical Research grant programs provide $2.25 million in support for postdoctoral investigators and junior faculty

The mechanisms behind thrombocytopenia in patients with portal hypertension and chronic liver disease

SwRI uses machine learning to calibrate emissions control systems faster, more efficiently

Blood test offers hope for more effective ovarian cancer treatment

Pain during a C-section? New study challenges fears about general anesthesia

New study identifies overlooked tool for menopause symptom relief

City of Hope to present breakthroughs in blood cancer, microbiome research and cellular therapies at ASH 2025

‘Cool’ signs based on a new colorful, flexible electronic display technology

Bees thrive in overlooked pockets of Puget Sound

PLOS launches two journals to address critical real-world challenges

[Press-News.org] Making hydrogen energy with the common nickel