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

Tuning surface molecular design of porous carbon for blue energy harvesting

Tuning surface molecular design of porous carbon for blue energy harvesting
2023-07-27
(Press-News.org) Did you know rivers carry about 40 trillion metric tons of river water into the ocean every year? This meeting point, known as the estuary, holds great potential for electricity generation. Mixing the two types of water -- seawater and river water containing different salt concentrations -- releases a substantial amount of Gibbs free energy, which can be converted to electricity using semipermeable membranes. However, the performance of membranes has limited the economic viability of membrane-based approaches, leaving the vast potential of this naturally abundant energy source largely untapped.

To overcome the challenges associated with the membranes, researchers have developed membrane-free technologies. Instead of using membranes to create a boundary between saltwater and freshwater for mixing, they mix directly in the nanopores of capacitive electrodes. In particular, mixing induces structural changes of the electric double layers (EDLs) that spontaneously form at a solid-electrolyte interface -- the surface of the pores in this case. When freshwater is introduced to a pore filled with seawater, the salt concentration in the pore will reduce, making the EDLs expand – much the same way as moving the two plates of a parallel-plate capacitor away from each other. As a result, the Gibbs free energy driving the expansion is converted to electrical energy stored in the EDLs. However, the low surface charge of existing electrode systems has been a major challenge for this concept to be a promising contender as an alternative to membrane-based approaches – the benefits of getting rid of membranes remain hypothetical.

Researchers at Texas A&M University-Corpus Christi, the University of Hawaii, and the Beijing Institute of Nanoenergy and Nanosystems have recently developed a new electrode system that demonstrated a much higher level of surface charge when submerged in aqueous electrolytic solutions (DOI: 10.34133/research.0173). By treating the surface of a porous, activated carbon material differently, the researchers were able to modify the surface molecular structures by attaching functional groups that induce opposite surface charges to the surface. In particular, when immersed in a sodium chloride solution, the surface groups on one electrode each loses one hydrogen atom while those on the other electrode each gains one hydrogen atom, creating oppositely charged electrodes. The opposite charges increase the electrostatic energy stored in the EDLs, allowing more Gibbs free energy to be converted to electricity. Under normal seawater and freshwater condition, the new electrode system could triple the areal power density of existing capacitive systems. The volumetric power density of the prototype device is on par with or even surpasses, that of membrane-based technologies. Amazingly, the system can retain 90% of its capacity after more than 50 thousand charging/discharging cycles, making it much more economically competitive. The researchers are confident that their approach has significant room for further development. This breakthrough opens up exciting possibilities for practical, economically viable solutions to harness this abundant source of renewable energy.

END

[Attachments] See images for this press release:
Tuning surface molecular design of porous carbon for blue energy harvesting

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

New research reveals historic migration’s link to present-day implicit racial bias

2023-07-27
Roughly six million Black people moved away from the American South during the Great Migration between 1910 and 1970, hoping to escape racial violence and discrimination while pursuing economic and educational opportunities. Now, research has uncovered a link between this historic event with present-day inequalities and implicit biases. In a new Social Psychological and Personality Science article, researchers report that current implicit bias among White people at the county-level is associated with the proportion of Black residents living in that county during the Great Migration (circa 1930). The research supports the Bias ...

Sri Lanka floods easier to predict with India weather tool

2023-07-27
Floods and landslides in Sri Lanka could be better predicted by applying weather forecasting techniques currently used in India, a study has found. The new research has the potential to help communities better prepare for extreme rainfall in Sri Lanka. The South Asian island is extremely vulnerable to floods and landslides caused by heavy rainfall. In May 2017, more than 150 people were killed after Sri Lanka experienced flooding triggered by monsoon rains. Led by Dr Akshay Deoras and published today (Thursday, 27 July) in Geophysical Research Letters, the study expands the ...

Study highlights importance of quality and potency of saw palmetto extracts in prostate health supplements

2023-07-27
A new study published in the Journal of Urology Open Plus reveals that 7 saw palmetto products met the identity and potency standards to effectively address urinary tract symptoms associated with an enlarged prostate. According to the lead author of the study, Dr. Bilal Chughtai, who is a board-certified urologist, of the 28 supplements included in the study, only six of the lipid extracts and one multi-active product were found to have the appropriate dosage of 320 milligrams of saw palmetto extract and the minimum 80% fatty acids clinically shown to address ...

New app developed at NYU Tandon School of Engineering promises to make navigating subway stations easier for people with blindness and low vision

New app developed at NYU Tandon School of Engineering promises to make navigating subway stations easier for people with blindness and low vision
2023-07-27
A new trip-planning app has shown encouraging results in improving navigation inside subway stations, according to a study published in IEEE Journal of Translational Engineering in Health and Medicine, promising the possibility of easier commutes for people who are blind and low-vision.  Designed by researchers at NYU Tandon School of Engineering and NYU Grossman School of Medicine, Commute Booster routes public-transportation users through the “middle mile” – the part of a journey inside subway stations or other similar transit hubs – in addition to the “first” and “last” miles that bring travelers to and from those hubs.  “The ...

New research shows potential role for mangos in supporting vascular health and antioxidant activities

2023-07-27
Boston - July 27, 2023 - Mangos are one of the most popular fruits1 in the world, grown in more than 100 countries2 globally and consumed by an extremely diverse population. Now, two new studies funded by the National Mango Board and presented as posters during the American Society for Nutrition’s Annual Conference (Nutrition 2023) show mangos may play a role in risk reductions for vascular issues while helping to improve antioxidant levels among relatively healthy adult men and women who are overweight ...

James Webb Space Telescope sees Jupiter moons in a new light

James Webb Space Telescope sees Jupiter moons in a new light
2023-07-27
With its sensitive infrared cameras and high-resolution spectrometer, the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) is revealing new secrets of Jupiter's Galilean satellites, in particular Ganymede, the largest moon, and Io, the most volcanically active. In two separate publications, astronomers who are part of JWST's Early Release Science program report the first detection of hydrogen peroxide on Ganymede and sulfurous fumes on Io, both the result of Jupiter's domineering influence. "This ...

Tiny surgical robots could transform detection and treatment of cancers

Tiny surgical robots could transform detection and treatment of cancers
2023-07-27
The ultra-soft tentacle, which measures just 2 millimetres in diameter and is controlled by magnets, can reach some of the smallest bronchial tubes and could transform the treatment of lung cancer.  It paves the way for a more accurate, tailored, and far less invasive approach to treatment and has been developed by engineers, scientists and clinicians based at the STORM Lab in Leeds.  The researchers tested the magnetic tentacle robot on the lungs of a cadaver and found that it can travel 37% deeper than the standard equipment and leads to less tissue damage.  The results ...

Fusion model hot off the wall 

Fusion model hot off the wall 
2023-07-27
Kyoto, Japan -- Humans may never be able to tame the Sun, but hydrogen plasma -- making up most of the Sun's interior -- can be confined in a magnetic field as part of fusion power generation: with a caveat.  The extremely high temperature plasmas, typically as high as 100 million degrees Celsius, confined in the tokamaks -- donut-shaped fusion reactors -- cause damage to the containment walls of these mega devices. Researchers inject hydrogen and inert gases near the device wall to cool the plasma by radiation and recombination, ...

Stockholm University leads Bio-LUSH for development of new sustainable bio-based fibers for a circular bioeconomy

2023-07-27
Bio-LUSH, a Horizon Europe project led by Stockholm University, extracts high-quality fibers from diverse plants, maximizing resource utilization for sustainable bio-based innovation. Supported by the EU-call Circular Bio-based Europe Joint Undertaking (CBE JU), the research project establishes a value chain for sustainable products such as textiles, food packaging and reinforced composites ready for the consumer market, thus driving plant-based solutions for a circular bioeconomy. The four-year Bio-LUSH project, launched in May 2023, supports the establishment of a ...

Low fiber intake during pregnancy may delay development in infants’ brains

2023-07-27
Undernutrition during pregnancy is one of the factors linked to an increased risk of diseases in children as they grow older. Yet, maternal malnutrition remains a problem for women worldwide. Animal studies have shown that a low-fiber diet during pregnancy impairs brain nerve function in offspring. Now, in the first human cohort study on the relation of maternal nutritional imbalance and infants’ brain development, researchers in Japan have investigated if the same effects can be found in humans. “Most pregnant women in Japan consume far less dietary ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

One month of clot prevention after a stent was as effective as year-long course for AFib

Ablation reduces stroke risk for AFib and may remove need for some types of blood thinners

Earlier blood transfusion may reduce heart failure, arrhythmia in adults with heart disease

Texas Tech professors awarded $12 million for data center and AI research

Diabetes drug reduced irregular heartbeat events in overweight/obese adults with AFib

Houston-based medical technology company wins overall global health tech competition at Scientific Sessions 2025

Cup of coffee a day may not be harmful for some adults with AFib and could lower episodes

Heart attack risk halved in adults with heart disease taking tailored vitamin D doses

Phages with fully-synthetic DNA can be edited gene by gene

Investigational daily pill lowered bad cholesterol as much as injectables

Researcher seeks to understand delays in language development

Medication still better than procedure for some irregular heartbeat conditions

Understanding how bacteria use “sunscreen” to adapt to climate

Inaugural Margot and Tom Pritzker Prize for AI in Science Research Excellence announces winners at conference

COP webpages emit seven times more carbon than average sites

Successful visualization of the odor discrimination process in an AI-assisted olfactory sensor

Patients with peripheral arterial disease who also have atrial fibrillation face significantly higher risk for cardiac events including death

Factoring in frailty and age to improve pancreatic cancer treatment

Preclinical support for using psychedelics to treat alcohol use disorders

Exploring how the maternal bond affects social processing in babies

How do people learn new movement patterns and alternate between them?

Devilishly distinctive new bee species discovered in WA Goldfields

Updated labeling for menopausal hormone therapy

Collaborative research team to uncover how plants “remember” and adapt to heat stress

Research alert: AI model powers skin cancer detection across diverse populations

Long-term poverty and rising unsecured debt in early adulthood each linked to higher risk of premature death

A novel climate biostress model and sentinel system seeks to track global climate impacts

Zero-cost, AI-driven digital detection identifies Alzheimer’s and related dementias without additional clinician time

Suicide prevention program decreases risks, saves lives among people recently released from jail

Evolution of firearm mortality as the leading cause of death in the US pediatric population

[Press-News.org] Tuning surface molecular design of porous carbon for blue energy harvesting