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Cheaper Catalyst to Make Hydrogen
Fuel from Sunlight
Solar panels coated with a newly-developed
and inexpensive metal catalyst could become a cheap source
of solar energy for the developing world, according to a study.
Two years ago, scientists achieved a major breakthrough,
splitting water into hydrogen and oxygen using sunlight and
a cobalt catalyst. They found a way to efficiently store the
sun's energy as fuel.
Now, researchers have used a cheaper nickel-borate catalyst
that could be used instead of cobalt to make inexpensive and
efficient solar power storage "the 'fast food'
equivalent of energy systems", said the team which published
its research last week (10 May) in the journal Proceedings
of the National Academy of Sciences.
Lead author Mircea Dinca, researcher at the US-based Massachusetts
Institute of Technology told SciDev.Net: "One of the
main problems with solar energy is using it at night".
"With our device you use the solar energy you get during
the day to electrolyse water [break it down to oxygen and
hydrogen], store the hydrogen, then consume it later."
Conventional photovoltaic and battery systems are already
widely used in the developing world to store solar energy
for night-time use but such systems have limited storage capacity
(see Financing solar power for the poor). Hydrogen stores
a thousand times more energy per unit of volume than do the
best batteries, researchers said.
Another advantage, according to Dinca, is that the catalyst
works with dirty water and could even purify it for drinking.
"In developing countries you don't normally have access
to very pure water," he said. "Our catalysts work
with water taken from rivers and this is something that hasn't
been shown before."
Dinca added that the catalyst is now being tested for commercial
value. The idea is to take it to the developing world, "the
sooner, the better," he said.
Harish Hande, head of India's SELCO Solar a social
enterprise taking sustainable power to under-served households
and businesses said that cheaper and more flexible
ways to store energy will also help develop new business opportunities.
"Now, because of expensive and heavy storage systems,
there is much less opportunity to innovate, especially for
the poor," said Hande. "For example, women entrepreneurs
cannot do rentals because the batteries are too heavy and
the acid destroys their sari!"
But Frederik Krebs, researcher from the Solar Energy Programme,
Technical University of Denmark, cautioned that this laboratory-based
research is still far from being used in the developing world.
"Putting science to work in society is pretty difficult,"
he said.
"It is not clear whether the new catalyst is any better
than the [previously developed] cobalt catalyst," said
Harry Gray, a chemist from the California Institute of Technology,
United States. "More work will be needed before we will
know whether it will perform as well in solar-driven water
splitters," he added.
Source: SciDev net
Date: May 17, 2010

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