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Power Science

CO2 To Ethanol In One Step With Cheap Catalyst (sciencedaily.com) 228

Reader networkBoy writes: Boffins at ORNL (Department of Energy's Oak Ridge National Laboratory) have discovered a simple and cheap catalyst that can take CO2 (Carbon Dioxide) dissolved in solution with water and at room temperature convert it to ethanol with 60%+ yields. They envision it as a way to store surplus power from green energy plants and then burning it to fill in lulls in supply.From the report:The team used a catalyst made of carbon, copper and nitrogen and applied voltage to trigger a complicated chemical reaction that essentially reverses the combustion process. With the help of the nanotechnology-based catalyst which contains multiple reaction sites, the solution of carbon dioxide dissolved in water turned into ethanol with a yield of 63 percent. Typically, this type of electrochemical reaction results in a mix of several different products in small amounts. "We're taking carbon dioxide, a waste product of combustion, and we're pushing that combustion reaction backwards with very high selectivity to a useful fuel," Rondinone said. "Ethanol was a surprise -- it's extremely difficult to go straight from carbon dioxide to ethanol with a single catalyst."
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CO2 To Ethanol In One Step With Cheap Catalyst

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  • by avandesande ( 143899 ) on Tuesday October 18, 2016 @03:38PM (#53102657) Journal
    By law, boffintry can only be granted to citizens of the UK.
    • #I read The Register way too much...
      $summary=~s/boffins/alpha geeks/ig; #happy?
      #-nb

    • By law, boffintry can only be granted to citizens of the UK.

      This is a common misconception, but in fact any member of the British Commonwealth can qualify for boffin status. There is lively competition between English, Scottish, Welsh, North Irish, Australian, Kiwi, and even Canadian boffins.

      In fact, I hear that many boffins vied to bring us this information.

      [Ducks.]

  • Link to the paper (Score:5, Informative)

    by Okian Warrior ( 537106 ) on Tuesday October 18, 2016 @03:55PM (#53102825) Homepage Journal

    Here's a link to the actual paper [sci-hub.cc].

    (Since the editors won't do it.)

    The catalyst looks pretty good. I'd be interested to see how long it lasts - some catalysts become poisoned by impurities in the source gasses, and lose effectiveness over time.

    The paper mentions copper oxide forming on the copper nanoparticles due to transport in the air to the test equipment. That probably means that the catalyst might lose effectiveness due to dissolved oxygen in the water.

    Any actual chemists care to comment?

  • How much energy is consumed in the process? Is this just mix two chemicals and stir or do you have to add power to make the process work? My concern is that this is another thing like corn ethanol, the production of which consumes as much or more energy than in produces with a net result of a negative benefit. It says "consume extra electricity when available" which is a rather screwy way of saying produce more power than is actually needed and then turn it into ethanol. This sounds like a movie I've al

    • Well you can't just get energy out of nowhere... so yes it would consume it. The problem with renewable energy is how to store the extra energy offpeak so that you can use it onpeak. Storing the energy chemically would be very nice compared to some of the other weird ways like pumping water uphill and so on.
  • The price of a catalyst is irrelevant since catalysts by definition remain unchanged by the chemical reaction. The price of the electricity to convert the CO2 into ethanol, however... Catalysts do not violate the laws of thermodynamics. If you do the math you'll find that the energy you put it will be significantly greater than what you'd get from burning all that ethanol back into CO2.
    • The catalyst is not consumed in the reaction but the catalyst most certainly can be affected by a reaction. If you don't believe me then explain why fuel cell poisoning isn't real.

      The price of the catalyst is also most certainly important too.

  • pretty dang difficult to capture CO2 only and then highly compress it so you can dissolve it in H2O and run this process.

    • by dfsmith ( 960400 )

      They already do this at some power generation stations (e.g., [1] from 2014). There may possibly be issues with suphur poisoning though.

      [1] https://www.theguardian.com/en... [theguardian.com]

    • by Hadlock ( 143607 )

      The main problem is that the sun does not produce a whole lot of energy that can be captured on the night side of the earth, and we happen to consume a lot of energy when it's dark. If you overbuild capacity for daytime generation, nighttime generation is mostly solved, the big problem now is not cheap renewable energy, but rather, how to store it. Even if converting water and CO2 in to Ethanol is only 15% efficiency, you're still able to store 15% of your excess grid energy, whereas before you could only s

  • by neiras ( 723124 ) on Tuesday October 18, 2016 @04:55PM (#53103357)

    They should fund a startup ("carbonol.io") and Kickstarter a giant oceangoing ethanol mining drone, then lobby world governments to prevent further carbon emission cuts so as to protect their business model.

  • When I looked up "ethanol fuel cell" it seems Nissan is working on those. So now I have this vision of rural people with lots of solar, an ethanol reformer and a Nissan.
  • by JustNiz ( 692889 ) on Tuesday October 18, 2016 @05:37PM (#53103649)

    With Mars having a 96% Co2 atmosphere, it seems like this technology would be a dream come true for the first human explorers to Mars.

    Elon Musk said that the first visitors would have to build a propellant plant and it would take many months to make their own fuel for the return journey. I wonder how significantly this technology and the abundance of Martian CO2 would speed that up?

  • by sabbede ( 2678435 ) on Wednesday October 19, 2016 @07:44AM (#53106409)
    Beer.

    Live in a State that mandates a silly low alcohol content for your beer? Drop in the catalyst, hook it to a battery and voila! Problem solved.

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