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  • Catalisi Daniel Nocera del MIT

    Articolo in inglese dalla rivista Scientific American

    Hydrogen Power on the Cheap--Or at Least, Cheaper: Scientific American

    The fuel of the future could be hydrogen—if it can be made cheaply enough. Currently, electrolyzers (machines that split water into its constituent hydrogen and oxygen) need a catalyst, namely platinum, to run; ditto fuel cells to recombine that hydrogen with oxygen, which produces electricity. The problem is that the precious metal costs about $1,700 to $2,000 per ounce, which means that hydrogen would be an uneconomical fuel source unless a less costly catalyst can be found. But researchers from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (M.I.T.) and Monash University in Australia report in Science today that they may have a cost-effective solution.
    Chemist Daniel Nocera, head of the M.I.T.'s Solar Revolution Project, focused on one side of the equation: splitting water into its constituent hydrogen and oxygen molecules. This can be done well, but it remains difficult to actually separate the molecules. But Nocera and postdoctoral fellow Matthew Kanan discovered it could be accomplished by simply adding the metals cobalt and phosphate to water and running a current through it. In contrast to platinum, cobalt and phosphate cost roughly $2.25 an ounce and $.05 an ounce, respectively.
    "We [have] figured out a way just using a glass of water at room temperature, under atmospheric pressure," Nocera says. "This thing [a thin film of cobalt and phosphate on an electrode] just churns away making [oxygen] from water."
    Inspiration for the new catalyst came from nature; Nocera studied the chain of processes that take place during photosynthesis, such as how plants use the energy from sunlight to rearrange water's chemical bonds. In a future hydrogen economy, he imagines, a house would function much like a leaf does, using the sun to power household electricity and to break down water into fuel—a sort of artificial photosynthesis.
    According to John Turner, a research fellow at the National Renewable Energy Laboratory in Golden, Colo., who was not involved in the research, the discovery could reduce the need for platinum in a conventional electrolyzer. He believes it could also play a role in a future large-scale hydrogen generator, which would collect the energy from sunlight in huge fields and then run that electric current through water to produce vast amounts of hydrogen to meet, for example, the demand from a future fleet of hydrogen-powered vehicles. "That's what his advance is pointing towards," he says, "finding an alternative catalyst that will allow us to do oxygen evolution (breaking the bonds of water or H2O and forming oxygen) in concert with hydrogen" on a grand scale.
    But that still leaves plenty of platinum in the other side of the equation: the fuel cells that combine hydrogen and oxygen back into water to harvest electricity. Chemist Bjorn Winther-Jensen of Monash University in Australia and his colleagues addressed that problem by developing new electrodes for fuel cells made from a special conducting polymer, that costs around $57 per counce.
    During experiments, the polymer proved just as effective as platinum at harvesting electricity—and the work could prove immediately relevant in mini fuel cells, such as the kind that are being designed for computers.
    In order for this to work on the grand scale of a fuel cell stack for a hydrogen vehicle or power plant "we need to develop a more three-dimensional structure to get thicker electrodes and a higher current per square centimeter," says Winther-Jensen. Regardless, by reducing or eliminating platinum, the two studies help pave the way for a future hydrogen economy.

  • #2
    Originariamente inviato da robz40 Visualizza il messaggio
    Articolo in inglese dalla rivista Scientific American
    .....
    Ciao,
    avevo visto ieri la notizia sul MIT news , però mi sembra un pò come il FV ai lamponi ..o non mi ricordo a quale frutto di bosco.
    Mi sembra di aver capito che se la ricerca viene finanziata qualche risultato forse è atteso fra una decina di anni....
    Impianto FV 2,94 kWp 23° -85 est 1° CE e 3 PDC Riello aria 13 kWt dal 2007.
    Caminetto aria Montegrappa CMP05 10,5 kWt, 4* dal 2011. Caldaia a metano Riello Family 26K
    Twingo Electric Zen dal 2021 Tesla MY dal 2024

    Commenta


    • #3
      Nel sito ci sono le risposte dei lettori, la cosa sembra piu' che altro da scoop giacche' bisogna passare comunque attraverso la produzione di energia elettrica. In particolare

      Bart_Hibbs at 11:38 AM on 8/01/08

      riporta


      Making the electrolyzer and fuel cell cheaper does not make hydrogen that much cheaper, there is still the energy cost. Electrolyzers are 70% efficient, compressing the hydrogen to store it uses 20% of the energy in the hydrogen (80% efficient) and fuel cells, after parasitic loads (pumps, compressors, fans) are 60% efficient. 0.7 x 0.8 x 0.6 = 0.336. Using hydrogen increases the cost of energy by a factor of almost 3! Batteries cost you only 10% of the energy stored.

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      • #4
        Da

        Hydrogen Power on the Cheap--Or at Least, Cheaper: Scientific American


        SELyons at 2:28 PM on 8/07/08Perhaps your readers would be interested in watching a 10-minute video about the Nocera-Kanan discovery. It’s the pilot for a project called Chemical Explorers, a series of Internet videos about interesting developments in modern chemistry. Because it’s intended for a general audience, the video doesn’t go into the kind of technical detail that some of the earlier posts do. But it does allow viewers to hear directly from the two chemists behind this discovery, it shows the cobalt catalyst in action, and it tells the interesting story of how the discovery came about. The video can be watched at the following site: Chemical Explorers on blip.tv Steve Lyons
        Reply | Report Abuse
        SELyons at 2:27 PM on 8/07/08
        Perhaps your readers would be interested in watching a 10-minute video about the Nocera-Kanan discovery. Its the pilot for a project called Chemical Explorers, a series of Internet videos about interesting developments in modern chemistry. Because its intended for a general audience, the video doesnt go into the kind of technical detail that some of the earlier posts do. But it does allow viewers to hear directly from the two chemists behind this discovery, it shows the cobalt catalyst in action, and it tells the interesting story of how the discovery came about. The video can be watched at the following site: Chemical Explorers on blip.tv Steve Lyons

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