advertisement
Science News
from research organizations

New catalyst produces cheap hydrogen fuel

Date:
November 29, 2018
Source:
Queensland University of Technology
Summary:
Chemistry researchers have discovered cheaper and more efficient materials for producing hydrogen for the storage of renewable energy that could replace current water-splitting catalysts.
Share:
advertisement

FULL STORY

Professor Anthony O'Mullane said the potential for the chemical storage of renewable energy in the form of hydrogen was being investigated around the world.

"The Australian Government is interested in developing a hydrogen export industry to export our abundant renewable energy," said Professor O'Mullane from QUT's Science and Engineering Faculty.

"In principle, hydrogen offers a way to store clean energy at a scale that is required to make the rollout of large-scale solar and wind farms as well as the export of green energy viable.

"However, current methods that use carbon sources to produce hydrogen emit carbon dioxide, a greenhouse gas that mitigates the benefits of using renewable energy from the sun and wind.

"Electrochemical water splitting driven by electricity sourced from renewable energy technology has been identified as one of the most sustainable methods of producing high-purity hydrogen."

Professor O'Mullane said the new composite material he and PhD student Ummul Sultana had developed enabled electrochemical water splitting into hydrogen and oxygen using cheap and readily available elements as catalysts.

“传统上,其催化剂分解水lve expensive precious metals such as iridium oxide, ruthenium oxide and platinum," he said.

advertisement

"An additional problem has been stability, especially for the oxygen evolution part of the process.

“我们发现,我们可以使用两个地球bundant cheaper alternatives -- cobalt and nickel oxide with only a fraction of gold nanoparticles -- to create a stable bi-functional catalyst to split water and produce hydrogen without emissions.

"From an industry point of view, it makes a lot of sense to use one catalyst material instead of two different catalysts to produce hydrogen from water."

Professor O'Mullane said the stored hydrogen could then be used in fuel cells.

"Fuel cells are a mature technology, already being rolled out in many makes of vehicle. They use hydrogen and oxygen as fuels to generate electricity -- essentially the opposite of water splitting.

"With a lot of cheaply 'made' hydrogen we can feed fuel cell-generated electricity back into the grid when required during peak demand or power our transportation system and the only thing emitted is water."

Story Source:

Materials provided byQueensland University of Technology.Note: Content may be edited for style and length.


Journal Reference:

  1. Ummul K. Sultana, James D. Riches, Anthony P. O'Mullane.Gold Doping in a Layered Co-Ni Hydroxide System via Galvanic Replacement for Overall Electrochemical Water Splitting.Advanced Functional Materials, 2018; 28 (43): 1804361 DOI:10.1002/adfm.201804361

Cite This Page:

Queensland University of Technology. "New catalyst produces cheap hydrogen fuel." ScienceDaily. ScienceDaily, 29 November 2018. .
Queensland University of Technology. (2018, November 29). New catalyst produces cheap hydrogen fuel.ScienceDaily. Retrieved July 25, 2023 from www.koonmotors.com/releases/2018/11/181129100036.htm
Queensland University of Technology. "New catalyst produces cheap hydrogen fuel." ScienceDaily. www.koonmotors.com/releases/2018/11/181129100036.htm (accessed July 25, 2023).

Explore More
from ScienceDaily

RELATED STORIES