(Press-News.org) Most metals found in nature are actually in their oxide forms. To extract those metals to use in critical applications — ranging from infrastructure such as bridges and buildings to advanced technologies like airplanes, semiconductors or even quantum materials — those oxides must be reduced with gases. A new study illuminating how different gases can affect oxide reduction, however, has the potential to revamp scientific understandings and current industrial practices.
Hydrogen or carbon monoxide are typically used as reductants, presumed to get the job done similarly enough. This research highlights, for the first time, distinct variations between the two that affect the critical chemical reactions fueling metal production.
Published in Nature, one of the world’s leading scientific journals, the new paper was a collaboration between Binghamton University and Brookhaven National Laboratory, as well as Stony Brook University and Columbia University.
“For metal production, the key challenge is efficiently removing atomic oxygen from metal oxides to yield pure metals,” said Guangwen Zhou, a SUNY distinguished professor at the Thomas J. Watson College of Engineering and Applied Science and deputy director of Binghamton University’s Materials Science and Engineering program. “The goal is to drive this reduction process using less energy, at lower temperatures, and with minimal carbon dioxide emissions. Our study offers insights that can help guide the choice of gases or reductants to accelerate reaction kinetics, making metal extraction faster, cleaner and more energy efficient.”
Carbon monoxides have raised concerns for their role in releasing harmful greenhouse gases during manufacturing. The findings of this study point to hydrogen as a greener alternative for metal production, capable of speeding up the process in a more sustainable manner. All this happens while generating benign water vapor as a much more benign chemical consequence.
Members of Zhou’s research group have been working on oxides for a long time, according to Binghamton doctoral student and first author Xiaobo Chen, but they gradually began noticing discrepancies in reduction reactions when using one gas versus another.
After prying into the mechanisms of each reducing agent, they found that carbon monoxide and hydrogen reductants aren’t actually so similar. When carbon monoxide was used to reduce nickel oxide, the oxide’s surface gradually grew coated with a thin layer of metal — essentially stopping any more catalytic reactions from occurring as oxygen depleted from the top. Trapped and unable to migrate into the bulk, those pockets lacking oxygen accumulated at the surface and drove the local conversion of nickel oxide into metallic nickel.
This newly formed metallic “crust” further blocked oxygen from being removed deeper within the oxide, slowing the overall reduction process. In addition to carbon dioxide emissions, continuing to wring any reactions out of a now inactive oxide would be even more costly and time-consuming.
“If we look at CO — because it’s mostly used as a method for metal production — if metal forms on the surface, it can block active sites and slow down the reaction kinetics,” Zhou said. “That makes the extraction process more difficult, which means you need to use more energy and higher temperatures.”
In contrast, when hydrogen was used, oxygen vacancies formed at the surface could migrate into the bulk of the oxide, enabling metal formation throughout the interior. Importantly, the surface remained largely intact with hydrogen, still capable of the catalytic reactions that are crucial for jumpstarting chemical reactions.
“All this difference is related to the difference in the fundamental mechanisms,” Zhou said. “I think that’s the reason the community has a strong interest in this work, because we’ve provided this fundamental insight to understand these two basic reductant gases in controlling reactions — in both kinetics and reaction products.”
And because hydrogen protons help oxygen vacancies more easily migrate away from the surface, that also raises the possibility of replenishing them through counterdiffusion of atomic oxygen from the oxide’s interior to its surface — a self-healing behavioral quirk that oxides exhibit. Zhou has also studied this mechanism in a paper published earlier in June, in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
“If we use hydrogen, we can facilitate this process. For industrial applications, we can have that catalyst regeneration, without interrupting the catalytic process,” Zhou said. “The reaction itself may actually build or provide some self-healing capabilities to make the catalyst last longer.”
A longtime collaboration
More than its potential to improve industrial practices, this study also recontextualizes how scientists can understand the very basic principles of oxide reduction, according to Judith Yang, a scientist at the Brookhaven National Laboratory’s Center for Functional Nanomaterials (CFN).
The previous belief held that reductions are more influenced by the partial pressure of oxygen, rather than the reductants themselves. You might wonder, for example, what’s better for baking a good dessert: the temperature of the oven or the foundational ingredients.
“With these new tools and scientific insights, like from Professor Zhou, we’re really seeing a great richness in these systems, which have a classical and standard description that is still taught in the classroom,” Yang said. “We are now developing a new paradigm.”
Zhou and his students conducted their research using instruments, coupled with staff scientific support, at the shared user facilities housed in Brookhaven National Laboratory, which is sponsored by the U.S. Department of Energy’s Basic Energy Sciences program. First, they used CFN’s environmental transmission electron microscope (TEM) to observe in situ reactions in real time, atom by atom.
“There are only a few [of these tools] with such a capability in the entire country,” Zhou said. “That’s why we are lucky to have this opportunity to access this tool.”
They complemented this with synchrotron X-ray diffraction (XRD) to study reactions on a larger scale.
“The combination of these techniques provides a comprehensive, multi-scale understanding of the reaction,” explained Lu Ma, lead beamline scientist at the Quick X-ray Absorption and Scattering beamline at Brookhaven National Lab’s National Synchrotron Light Source II (NSLS-II). “While in-situ TEM reveals whether nucleation initiates on the surface or within the interior at the nanoscale, it cannot probe larger-scale samples. Conversely, ensemble XRD offers bulk-scale insights. Together, these methods deliver consistent and complementary evidence of the reaction dynamics across different length scales.”
A project like this required many hands and heads, Zhou said, but the partnership between Binghamton and Brookhaven has extended across multiple studies. Moreover, the CFN and NSLS-II are both shared-user facilities with cutting-edge instrumentation and scientific expertise that are free for use by the wider research community.
“I’ve been collaborating with people from Brookhaven National Lab since I started my faculty position here in Binghamton, so it’s probably closer to 20 years,” he said. “CFN at Brookhaven National Lab has been really instrumental to my career and research.”
Many of Zhou’s students also work on-site at Brookhaven, gaining crucial hands-on experience navigating complicated instruments and experiments while establishing rapport with seasoned scientists.
“We cannot guarantee, every time, to successfully perform the experiments. Sometimes, we need a lot of chances to try,” Chen said. “We cannot guarantee we can get a result every time, but CFN and NSLS-II are a fundamentally friendly environment. We can have a lot of chances to try those kinds of things.”
Studies like these don’t just benefit industries, Yang said, but also scientists like herself who get to work with ever-advancing technologies for a living.
“It’s the science that Xiaobo and Professor Zhou are doing that motivates the next generation of infrastructure development,” she said. “This interest in getting the chemistry and structure in real time, at the atomic scale, in a controlled environment, motivated our next instrument.” In this case, it’s a first-in-the-world specialized environmental scanning transmission electron microscope capable of handling angstrom-level resolution, exceptional energy and temporal resolution, and gases ranging from ultra-high vacuum pressures to only a few torr.
Zhou and his team now plan to expand their experimental materials, from copper to iron oxides — reminiscent of the same Bronze and Iron Ages that once characterized much of ancient history, Yang added.
“It’s just really fascinating that Guangwen’s work ties into the history of humankind,” she said. “We’re finding new fascination in what’s defined the materials ages of human history.”
END
New research could lead to greener, faster metal production
Study by Binghamton University and Brookhaven National Lab published in Nature
2025-08-20
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Researchers use electrochemistry to boost nuclear fusion rates
2025-08-20
Using a small bench-top reactor, researchers at the University of British Columbia (UBC) have demonstrated that electrochemically loading a solid metal target with deuterium fuel can boost nuclear fusion rates.
Large-scale magnetic confinement fusion—which puts plasmas under extreme temperatures and pressure—is being widely explored as a method for clean energy generation. The experiment published today in Nature takes an entirely different approach—with a more ...
AI learns biological variability to develop a high-performance serum-free culture medium
2025-08-20
Tsukuba, Japan—Cell culture is a foundational technology widely used across fields such as pharmaceutical production, regenerative medicine, food science, and materials engineering. A critical component of successful cell culture is the culture medium—a solution containing essential nutrients that support cell growth. Therefore, optimizing the culture medium for specific applications is vital. Recently, machine learning has become a powerful tool for efficient media optimization. However, the experimental ...
Transforming the tip of a mechanical pencil lead into a high-quality electron beam source
2025-08-20
Tsukuba, Japan—Nanocarbon materials with pointed geometries, such as graphene and carbon nanotubes, are considered promising candidates as sources for field emission electrons. However, their practical application remains limited due to difficulties in controlling the orientation and arrangement of these materials.
In this study, the researchers focused on commercially available pencil leads, which contain appropriate amounts of graphite flakes (graphite powder) and are naturally aligned along the axial direction. The fracture surface ...
From Alzheimer’s to AI: how the TReNDS center at Georgia State is advancing brain research
2025-08-20
ATLANTA — The TReNDS Center at Georgia State University has hit a new stride, earning dual NIH R01 grants aimed at tackling Alzheimer’s disease progression and advancing multimodal brain imaging techniques in neuropsychiatric disorders. The awards mark an exceptional year of achievement for the center and its director, Vince Calhoun, who was recently featured in a global special issue on the “State of the Brain” in the journal Aperture Neuro.
R01 grants by the National Institutes of Health (NIH) ...
Integrated analysis of serum and fecal metabolites reveals the role of bile acid metabolism in drug-induced liver injury: Implications for diagnostic and prognostic biomarkers
2025-08-20
Background and Aims
Drug-induced liver injury (DILI) represents a prevalent adverse event associated with medication use. However, the exact mechanisms underlying DILI remain incompletely understood, and the lack of specific diagnostic and prognostic biomarkers poses significant challenges to the clinical diagnosis and treatment of this condition. Consequently, our study aimed to endeavor to identify serum and fecal metabolic biomarkers, enabling more accurate DILI diagnosis and improved prediction of chronic progression.
Methods
Untargeted metabolomics analysis was performed on serum and ...
Industrial pollution’s imprint lasts generations
2025-08-20
In a groundbreaking study, University of Utah researchers found strong evidence that exposure to industrial pollution during pregnancy can shape a grandchild’s neurodevelopment. A child has a higher risk of an intellectual disability if their grandmothers lived near industrial facilities while pregnant with a parent, especially the mother. Higher density of industrial facilities corresponded to higher risk for the grandchild.
“We know that breathing polluted air is dangerous for our own health now, but it’s ...
15 students named national Youth Heart Ambassadors for 2025-26 school year
2025-08-20
DALLAS, Aug. 20, 2025 — With young Americans facing rising rates of mental and physical health challenges[1], the American Heart Association, a relentless force changing the future of health for everyone everywhere, is enlisting a new class of Youth Heart Ambassadors to spark change in schools and communities nationwide.
The Association selected 15 first through 12th grade students from across the country as national Youth Heart Ambassadors for the 2025-26 school year. Representing the Association’s Kids Heart Challenge™ and American Heart Challenge™ initiatives, the student ambassadors will use their personal connection to heart ...
Do no harm: Rethink treating diabetes, hypertension in frail older adults
2025-08-20
Effectively managing chronic conditions like diabetes and hypertension can greatly improve quality of life, reduce complications and extend longevity for older adults. However, when treatment becomes overly aggressive, it can do more harm than good. Every day, thousands of vulnerable older adults in the United States are harmed by intensive management of these conditions – resulting in dangerously low blood sugar or blood pressure, emergency visits, hospitalizations, disability or even death. These harms are ...
Hospitals, sanitation linked to spread of antibiotic resistance in Guatemala
2025-08-20
PULLMAN, Wash. — In Guatemalan communities, a recent visit to a health clinic or hospital — not antibiotic use — is the strongest predictor of carrying bacteria resistant to critical antibiotics, according to a new study led by Washington State University.
Previous research in Guatemala’s Western Highlands found nearly 46% of residents were colonized in the gastrointestinal tract with bacteria known as extended-spectrum cephalosporin-resistant Enterobacterales (ESCrE). These bacteria, often E. coli, can render the commonly used and important antibiotic ceftriaxone ineffective, complicating care for infections such as pneumonia or ...
Breaking new ground in stealth technology: KRISS develops core radar components domestically
2025-08-20
The Korea Research Institute of Standards and Science (KRISS, President Lee Ho Seong) has successfully localized core Radar Stealth technologies through indigenous development, without reliance on foreign technologies. This achievement is a significant milestone, laying the foundation for the establishment of stealth weapon systems in Korea, which have long been difficult to import due to their classification as national strategic military assets.
As global military tensions rise and competition in advanced weapon development intensifies, the importance of developing stealth weapon systems has increased significantly. Radar stealth ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Stylolites complicate sound wave propagation in sedimentary rock samples
Falling water forms beautiful fluted films
Breaking physical hardware limits: AI-enabled ultra-high-speed structured-light 3D imaging
Insect conservation stalled by absence of risk assessments
Reading for pleasure in freefall: New study finds 40% drop over two decades
Epigenetic noise: Unappreciated process helps cells change identity
Abrupt Antarctic changes could have ‘catastrophic consequences for generations to come’, experts warn
Saving bees with ‘superfoods’ – engineered supplement boosts colony reproduction
Threats of weather disasters for drug manufacturing facilities in the US
New Cleveland Clinic research identifies link between gut microbes and an elevated risk for abdominal aortic aneurysms
First-of-its-kind supernova reveals innerworkings of a dying star
Drought, extreme heat, and intimate partner violence in low- and middle-income countries
Family socioeconomic position and eating disorder symptoms across adolescence
Blocking brain damage may slow growth of brain cancer
New research could lead to greener, faster metal production
Researchers use electrochemistry to boost nuclear fusion rates
AI learns biological variability to develop a high-performance serum-free culture medium
Transforming the tip of a mechanical pencil lead into a high-quality electron beam source
From Alzheimer’s to AI: how the TReNDS center at Georgia State is advancing brain research
Integrated analysis of serum and fecal metabolites reveals the role of bile acid metabolism in drug-induced liver injury: Implications for diagnostic and prognostic biomarkers
Industrial pollution’s imprint lasts generations
15 students named national Youth Heart Ambassadors for 2025-26 school year
Do no harm: Rethink treating diabetes, hypertension in frail older adults
Hospitals, sanitation linked to spread of antibiotic resistance in Guatemala
Breaking new ground in stealth technology: KRISS develops core radar components domestically
Global Virus Network launches first-ever “Global Guardians” youth camp to prepare the next generation of virus hunters
The quest for an HIV vaccine
Scientists discover a new crystal that breathes oxygen
Robust isolated quantum spins established on a magnetic substrate
Omega-3’s could protect women against Alzheimer’s
[Press-News.org] New research could lead to greener, faster metal productionStudy by Binghamton University and Brookhaven National Lab published in Nature