At the University of Michigan College of Engineering, recent breakthroughs may lead to more effective means for harnessing the power of the sun.
Conventional means of collecting solar energy, solar cells for example, have been notoriously inefficient.
Now a team of chemical engineers at U-M is exploring new means of exploiting the abundant energy produced by Earth's nearest star. They have discovered a method for utilizing metal nano-particles, which act much like nanometer-sized light antennae, to help accelerate the production of renewable solar fuels and other chemicals.
The team, led by chemical engineering professor Suljo Linic, includes doctoral students David Ingram, Phillip Christopher and Hongliang Xin.
"The diffuse nature of solar light makes it very difficult to design processes that can convert the energy of sunlight into energy of chemical bonds at high rates," Linic said. "Our recent work shows that by using nano-particles with tailored optical properties, we can efficiently concentrate light and convert its energy into chemical energy at higher rates."
Two important findings from the team's research have recently been published in leading chemistry journals. The first article, published in The Journal of the American Chemical Society, is titled "Water Splitting on Composite Plasmonic-Metal/Semiconductor Photoelectrodes: Evidence for Selective Plasmon-Induced Formation of Charge Carriers near the Semiconductor Surface." In it the team explores the use of silver nano-antennas to enhance the ability of a semiconductor catalyst to generate hydrogen fuel from water using solar energy.
The second paper, "Visible light enhanced catalytic oxidation reactions on plasmonic silver nanostructures," and published in Nature Chemistry, points out that currently all important industrial chemical reactions are driven by thermal energy, requiring massive fossil fuel inputs. Linic and his team have developed technology where a significant fraction of energy input to drive chemical reactions can be provided in the form of solar energy. This discovery paves the way toward a more environmentally friendly chemical industry using the power of the sun.
The research is funded by The National Science Foundation (NSF) and the Camille Dreyfus Teacher-Scholar Award from the Camille and Henry Dreyfus Foundation.
The university is pursuing patent protection for the intellectual property, and is seeking commercialization partners to help bring the technology to market.
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