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Researcher develops material to create sustainable energy source
by Staff Writers
Tallahassee FL (SPX) Nov 04, 2015


File image.

A Florida State University researcher has discovered an artificial material that mimics photosynthesis and potentially creates a sustainable energy source.

In The Journal of Physical Chemistry, Assistant Professor of Chemical Engineering Jose L. Mendoza-Cortes details how this new material efficiently captures sunlight and then, how the energy can be used to break down water into oxygen (O2) and hydrogen (H2). This process is known as oxidation, and it is also what happens during photosynthesis when a plant uses light to break down water and carbohydrates, which are the main energy sources for the plant.

His discovery generates exciting new prospects for how this process could be used to forge new energy sources in a carbon neutral way. Potentially, hydrogen could be transported to other locations and burned as fuel.

"In theory, this should be a self-sustaining energy source," Mendoza-Cortes said. "Perhaps in the future, you could put this material on your roof and it could turn rain water into energy with the help of the sun."

But, unlike many other energy sources, this won't have a negative effect on the environment.

"You won't generate carbon dioxide or waste," he said. Mendoza-Cortes, a computational and theoretical chemist, said the challenge he faced was designing something that didn't rust from the process of breaking down water that also trapped the energy and was inexpensive to create. To do this, he initially developed a multilayered material out of manganese oxide, commonly known as birnessite.

But something exciting happened when Mendoza-Cortes and his team peeled back the layers of the material so just a single layer of the material remained - it began trapping light at a much faster rate.

In technical terms, it transitioned from an indirect band gap material to a direct band gap one.

Light with photo energy can penetrate indirect band gap materials much more easily without getting absorbed and used for other purposes. Silicon, for example, is the most commonly known indirect gap band material. But to make the material effective, silicon solar cells are typically stacked and thus hundreds of micrometers thick. If they were any thinner, light would simply pass through them.

Creating a single-layer material that can efficiently trap light is a much more desirable outcome because it is much simpler and cheaper to manufacture.

"This is why the discovery of this direct band gap material is so exciting," Mendoza-Cortes said. "It is cheap, it is efficient and you do not need a large amount to capture enough sunlight to carry out fuel generation."


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