Supersonic electrons could produce future Solar Fuel
Published: 02/03/2015
Researchers from institutions including Lund
University have taken a step closer to producing solar fuel using artificial
photosynthesis. In a new study, they have successfully tracked the electrons’
rapid transit through a light-converting molecule.
The
ultimate aim of the present study is to find a way to make fuel from water
using sunlight. This is what photosynthesis does all the time – plants convert
water and carbon dioxide to energy rich molecules using sunlight. Researchers
around the world are therefore attempting to borrow ideas from photosynthesis
in order to find a way to produce solar fuel artificially.
“Our study shows how it is possible to construct a molecule
in which the conversion of light to chemical energy happens so fast that no
energy is lost as heat. This means that all the energy in the light is stored
in a molecule as chemical energy”, said Villy Sundström, Professor of Chemical
Physics at Lund University.
Thus far, solar energy is harnessed in solar cells and solar
thermal collectors. Solar cells convert solar energy to electricity and solar
thermal collectors convert solar energy to heat. However, producing solar fuel,
for example in the form of hydrogen gas or methanol, requires entirely
different technology. The idea is that solar light can be used to extract
electrons from water and use them to convert light energy to energy rich molecules,
which are the constituent of the solar fuel.
“A device that can do this – a solar fuel cell – is a
complicated machine with light-collecting molecules and catalysts”, said Villy
Sundström.
In the present study, Professor Sundström and his colleagues
have developed and studied a special molecule that can serve as a model for the
type of chemical reactions that can be employed in a solar fuel cell. The
molecule comprises two metal centres, one that collects the light and another
that imitates the catalyst where the solar fuel is produced. The researchers
have managed to track the path of the electrons through the molecule in great
detail. They measured the time it took for an electron to cross the bridge
between the two metal atoms in the molecule. It takes half a picosecond, or
half a trillionth of a second.
“In everyday terms, this means that the electron flies
through the molecule at a speed of around four kilometres a second, which is
over ten times the speed of sound”, said Villy Sundström.
The researchers were surprised by the high speed. Another
surprising discovery was that the speed appears to be highly dependent on the
type of bridge between the atoms. In this study, the speed was 100 times higher
than with another type of bridge tested.
“This is the first time anyone has managed to track such a
complex and rapid reaction and to distinguish all the stages of the reaction”,
said Villy Sundström about the study, which has been published in the
journal Nature Communications.
The study is a collaboration between researchers from
several departments at Lund University and from Denmark, Germany, Hungary,
Japan and the USA. The measurements were performed in Japan at the SACLA X-ray
FEL in Harima, Japan, one of only two operating X-ray free-electron lasers in
the world.
Contact:
Professor Villy Sundström
Department of Chemistry, Lund University
+46 46 222 46 90
villy.sundstrom@chemphys.lu.se
Professor Villy Sundström
Department of Chemistry, Lund University
+46 46 222 46 90
villy.sundstrom@chemphys.lu.se
really its very interesting to read , thanks for blogging like this..
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