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    Home»Technology»New ‘Artificial Leaf’ Converts Harmful Carbon Dioxide Into Fuel
    Technology

    New ‘Artificial Leaf’ Converts Harmful Carbon Dioxide Into Fuel

    By University of WaterlooNovember 5, 20194 Comments3 Mins Read
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    Illustration Artificial Leaf Energy

    Scientists have created an “artificial leaf” to fight climate change by inexpensively converting harmful carbon dioxide (CO2) into a useful alternative fuel.

    The new technology, outlined in a paper published on November 4, 2019, in the journal Nature Energy, was inspired by the way plants use energy from sunlight to turn carbon dioxide into food.

    “We call it an artificial leaf because it mimics real leaves and the process of photosynthesis,” said Yimin Wu, an engineering professor at the University of Waterloo who led the research. “A leaf produces glucose and oxygen. We produce methanol and oxygen.”

    Making methanol from carbon dioxide, the primary contributor to global warming, would both reduce greenhouse gas emissions and provide a substitute for the fossil fuels that create them.

    The key to the process is a cheap, optimized red powder called cuprous oxide.

    New Carbon Dioxide Into Fuel Technology
    An hour-long chemical reaction creates the engineered red powder that is the key to new technology to turn carbon dioxide into fuel. Credit: University of Waterloo

    Engineered to have as many eight-sided particles as possible, the powder is created by a chemical reaction when four substances – glucose, copper acetate, sodium hydroxide, and sodium dodecyl sulfate – are added to water that has been heated to a particular temperature.

    The powder then serves as the catalyst, or trigger, for another chemical reaction when it is mixed with water into which carbon dioxide is blown and a beam of white light is directed with a solar simulator.

    “This is the chemical reaction that we discovered,” said Wu, who has worked on the project since 2015. “Nobody has done this before.”

    Yimin Wu, University of Waterloo
    University of Waterloo Engineering professor Yimin Wu. Credit: Brian Caldwell

    The reaction produces oxygen, as in photosynthesis, while also converting carbon dioxide in the water-powder solution into methanol. The methanol is collected as it evaporates when the solution is heated.

    Next steps in the research include increasing the methanol yield and commercializing the patented process to convert carbon dioxide collected from major greenhouse gas sources such as power plants, vehicles, and oil drilling.

    “I’m extremely excited about the potential of this discovery to change the game,” said Wu, a professor of mechanical and mechatronics engineering, and a member of the Waterloo Institute for Nanotechnology. “Climate change is an urgent problem and we can help reduce CO2 emissions while also creating an alternative fuel.”

    Wu collaborated on the paper, Facet-dependent active sites of a single Cu2O particle photocatalyst for CO2 reduction to methanol, with Tijana Rajh and other researchers at the Argonne National Laboratory in Illinois, as well as scientists at California State University, Northridge, and the City University of Hong Kong.

    Reference: “Facet-dependent active sites of a single Cu2O particle photocatalyst for CO2 reduction to methanol” by Yimin A. Wu, Ian McNulty, Cong Liu, Kah Chun Lau, Qi Liu, Arvydas P. Paulikas, Cheng-Jun Sun, Zhonghou Cai, Jeffrey R. Guest, Yang Ren, Vojislav Stamenkovic, Larry A. Curtiss, Yuzi Liu and Tijana Rajh, 4 November 2019, Nature Energy.
    DOI: 10.1038/s41560-019-0490-3

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    Carbon Dioxide Climate Change Green Energy Popular University of Waterloo
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    4 Comments

    1. Matt Carrell on November 7, 2019 8:02 am

      Yeah! This is a desperately NEEDed technology to fight climate change. Now, question is, can the fuel it makes burn cleanly without producing more carbon dioxide?

      Reply
    2. Vicki Nikolaidis on November 9, 2019 12:11 pm

      What an interesting insight this took! And when the methanol is used for energy the CO2 emitted can be captured with the same process

      Reply
    3. Mogi Vicentini on December 11, 2019 9:57 am

      … now I am waiting to know why this discovery – just as a lot of previous ones – will NOT be put at work for a substitute of petrol…

      Reply
    4. DP on August 31, 2022 9:29 pm

      Methanol is a more potent green house gas than Carbon Dioxide. Old fashioned leaves seem to be doing a better job.

      Reply
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