High-Flux Solar-Driven Thermochemical Dissociation of CO 2 and H 2 O Using Nonstoichiometric Ceria
Top Cited Papers
- 24 December 2010
- journal article
- other
- Published by American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) in Science
- Vol. 330 (6012), 1797-1801
- https://doi.org/10.1126/science.1197834
Abstract
Fuel from Heat: Plants grow by using energy from the Sun to convert carbon dioxide into sugar-based polymers and aromatics. These compounds in turn can be stripped of their oxygen, either through millennia of underground degradation to yield fossil fuels, or through a rather more rapid process of dissolution, fermentation, and hydrogenation to yield biofuels. Can we use sunlight to turn CO 2 into hydrocarbon fuel without relying on the intervening steps of plant growth and breakdown? Chueh et al. (p. 1797 ) demonstrate one possible approach, in which concentrated sunlight heats cerium oxide to a sufficiently high temperature (∼1500°C) to liberate some oxygen from its lattice. The material then readily strips O atoms from either water or CO 2 , yielding hydrogen or CO, which can then be combined to form fuels.Keywords
This publication has 26 references indexed in Scilit:
- Toward Solar Fuels: Photocatalytic Conversion of Carbon Dioxide to HydrocarbonsACS Nano, 2010
- Ce0.67Cr0.33O2.11: A New Low-Temperature O2 Evolution Material and H2 Generation Catalyst by Thermochemical Splitting of WaterChemistry of Materials, 2009
- Heat transfer model of a solar receiver-reactor for the thermal dissociation of ZnO—Experimental validation at 10kW and scale-up to 1MWChemical Engineering Journal, 2009
- High-Rate Solar Photocatalytic Conversion of CO2 and Water Vapor to Hydrocarbon FuelsNano Letters, 2009
- Powering the planet: Chemical challenges in solar energy utilizationProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2006
- Reactive ceramics of CeO2–MOx (M=Mn, Fe, Ni, Cu) for H2 generation by two-step water splitting using concentrated solar thermal energyEnergy, 2006
- Solar thermochemical production of hydrogen––a reviewSolar Energy, 2005
- Solarthermal Processing: A ReviewJournal of Solar Energy Engineering, 2000
- Kinetics of CO and CO2Evolution During the Temperature-Programmed Oxidation of Coke Deposited on Cracking CatalystsJournal of Catalysis, 1998
- Photoelectrocatalytic reduction of carbon dioxide in aqueous suspensions of semiconductor powdersNature, 1979