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Nanotechnology simplifies hydrogen production for clean energy

By R&D Editors | November 27, 2012

These transition electron microscope (TEM) images, generated at Brookhaven Laboratory’s Center for Functional Nanomaterials, show structural details and size distributions for different cadmium sulfide nanoparticles.In the first-ever experiment of its kind, researchers have demonstrated that clean energy hydrogen can be produced from water splitting by using very small metal particles that are exposed to sunlight. In the article, “Outstanding activity of sub-nm Au clusters for photocatalytic hydrogen production,” published in Applied Catalysis B: Environmental, Alexander Orlov, PhD, an assistant professor of materials science and engineering at Stony Brook University, and his colleagues from Stony Brook and Brookhaven National Laboratory, found that the use of gold particles smaller than 1 nm resulted in greater hydrogen production than other co-catalysts tested.

“This is the first ever demonstration of the remarkable potential of very small metal nanoparticles [containing fewer than a dozen atoms] for making fuel from water,” says Orlov. Using nanotechnology, Orlov’s group found that when the size of metal particles are reduced to dimensions below 1 nm, there is a tremendous increase in the ability of these particles to facilitate hydrogen production from water using solar light. They observed a “greater than 35 times increase” in hydrogen evolution as compared to ordinary materials.

In order to explain these fascinating results, Orlov collaborated with Brookhaven National Laboratory computational scientist Yan Li, who found some interesting anomalies in electronic properties of these small particles. Orlov noted that there is still a tremendous amount of work that needs be done to understand this phenomenon. “It is conceivable that we are only at the beginning of an extraordinary journey to utilize such small particles [of less than a dozen atoms in size] for clean energy production,” he says.

“In order to reduce our dependence on fossil fuels it is vital to explore various sustainable energy options,” Orlov says. “One possible strategy is to develop a hydrogen-based energy economy, which can potentially offer numerous environmental and energy efficiency benefits. Hydrogen can conceivably be a promising energy source in the future as it is a very clean fuel, which produces water as a final combustion product. The current challenge is to find new materials, which can help to produce hydrogen from sustainable sources, such as water.”

Source: Brookhaven National Laboratory

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