Bionic leaf turns sunlight into liquid fuel [View all]
Nocera, the Patterson Rockwood Professor of Energy at Harvard University, and Pamela Silver, the Elliott T. and Onie H. Adams Professor of Biochemistry and Systems Biology at Harvard Medical School, have co-created a system that uses solar energy to split water molecules and hydrogen-eating bacteria to produce liquid fuels.
The paper, whose lead authors include postdoctoral fellow Chong Liu and graduate student Brendan Colón, is described in a June 3 paper published in Science.
This is a true artificial photosynthesis system, Nocera said. Before, people were using artificial photosynthesis for water-splitting, but this is a true A-to-Z system, and weve gone well over the efficiency of photosynthesis in nature.
While the study shows the system can be used to generate usable fuels, its potential doesnt end there, said Silver, who is also a founding core member of the Wyss Institute at Harvard University.
The beauty of biology is its the worlds greatest chemist biology can do chemistry we cant do easily, she said. In principle, we have a platform that can make any downstream carbon-based molecule. So this has the potential to be incredibly versatile.
Dubbed bionic leaf 2.0, the new system builds on previous work by Nocera, Silver, and others, which though it was capable of using solar energy to make isopropanol faced a number of challenges. Chief among those, Nocera said, was the fact that the catalyst used to produce hydrogen a nickel-molybdenum-zinc alloy also created reactive oxygen species, molecules that attacked and destroyed the bacterias DNA. To avoid that, researchers were forced to run the system at abnormally high voltages, resulting in reduced efficiency.
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http://news.harvard.edu/gazette/story/2016/06/bionic-leaf-turns-sunlight-into-liquid-fuel/