Rice University researchers have engineered a key light-activated nanomaterial for the hydrogen economy. Using only inexpensive raw materials, a team from Riceโsย Laboratory for Nanophotonics,ย Syzygy Plasmonics Inc.ย and Princeton Universityโsย Andlinger Center for Energy and the Environmentย created a scalable catalyst that needs only the power of light to convert ammonia into clean-burning hydrogen fuel.
Theย researchย is published online today in the journalย Science.
The research follows government andย industry investmentย to create infrastructure and markets forย carbon-free liquid ammonia fuelย that will not contribute to greenhouse warming. Liquid ammonia is easy to transport and packs a lot of energy, with one nitrogen and three hydrogen atoms per molecule. The new catalyst breaks those molecules into hydrogen gas, a clean-burning fuel, and nitrogen gas, the largest component of Earthโs atmosphere. And unlike traditional catalysts, it doesnโt require heat. Instead, it harvests energy from light, either sunlight or energy-stingy LEDs.
The pace of chemical reactions typically increases with temperature, and chemical producers have capitalized on this for more than a century by applying heat on an industrial scale. The burning of fossil fuels to raise the temperature of large reaction vessels by hundreds or thousands of degrees results in an enormous carbon footprint. Chemical producers also spend billions of dollars each year on thermocatalysts โ materials that donโt react but further speed reactions under intense heating.
โTransition metals like iron are typically poor thermocatalysts,โ said study co-authorย Naomi Halasย of Rice. โThis work shows they can be efficient plasmonic photocatalysts. It also demonstrates that photocatalysis can be efficiently performed with inexpensive LED photon sources.โ
โThis discovery paves the way for sustainable, low-cost hydrogen that could be produced locally rather than in massive centralized plants,โ saidย Peter Nordlander, also a Rice co-author.
The best thermocatalysts are made from platinum andย related precious metalsย like palladium, rhodium and ruthenium. Halas and Nordlander spent years developing light-activated, or plasmonic, metal nanoparticles. The best of these are also typically made with precious metals like silver and gold.
Following theirย 2011 discoveryย of plasmonic particles that give off short-lived, high-energy electrons called โhot carriers,โ theyย discovered in 2016ย that hot-carrier generators could be married with catalytic particles to produce hybrid โantenna-reactors,โ where one part harvested energy from light and the other part used the energy to drive chemical reactions withย surgical precision.
Halas, Nordlander, their students and collaborators have worked for years to find non-precious metal alternatives for both the energy-harvesting and reaction-speeding halves of antenna reactors. The new study is a culmination of that work. In it, Halas, Nordlander,ย Rice alumnusย Hosseinย Robatjazi, Princeton engineer and physical chemistย Emily Carter, and others show that antenna-reactor particles made of copper and iron are highly efficient at converting ammonia. The copper, energy-harvesting piece of the particles captures energy from visible light.
โIn the absence of light, the copper-iron catalyst exhibited about 300 times lower reactivity than copper-ruthenium catalysts, which is not surprising given that ruthenium is a better thermocatalyst for this reaction,โ said Robatjazi, a Ph.D. alumnus from Halasโ research group who is now chief scientist at Houston-based Syzygy Plasmonics. โUnder illumination, the copper-iron showed efficiencies and reactivities that were similar to and comparable with those of copper-ruthenium.
Syzygyย has licensed Riceโs antenna-reactor technology, andย the study included scaled-up tests of the catalyst in the companyโs commercially available, LED-powered reactors. In laboratory tests at Rice, the copper-iron catalysts had been illuminated with lasers. The Syzygy tests showed the catalysts retained their efficiency under LED illumination and at a scale 500 times larger than lab setup.
โThis is the first report in the scientific literature to show that photocatalysis with LEDs can produce gram-scale quantities of hydrogen gas from ammonia,โ Halas said. โThis opens the door to entirely replace precious metals in plasmonic photocatalysis.โ
โGiven their potential for significantly reducing chemical sector carbon emissions, plasmonic antenna-reactor photocatalysts are worthy of further study,โ Carter added. โThese results are a great motivator. They suggest it is likely that other combinations of abundant metals could be used as cost-effective catalysts for a wide range of chemical reactions.โ
Halas is Riceโs Stanley C. Moore Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering and a professor of chemistry, bioengineering, physics and astronomy, and materials science and nanoengineering. Nordlander is Riceโs Wiess Chair and Professor of Physics and Astronomy, and professor of electrical and computer engineering, and materials science and nanoengineering. Carter is Princeton’s Gerhard R. Andlinger Professor in Energy and Environment at the Andlinger Center for Energy and the Environment, senior strategic adviser for sustainability science at the Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory, and professor of mechanical and aerospace engineering and of applied and computational mathematics. Robatjazi is also an adjunct professor of chemistry at Rice.
Halas and Nordlander are Syzygy co-founders and hold an equity stake in the company.
The research was supported by the Welch Foundation (C-1220, C-1222), the Air Force Office of Scientific Research (FA9550-15-1-0022), Syzygy Plasmonics, the Department of Defense and Princeton University.
Additional co-authors include Yigao Yuan, Jingyi Zhou, Aaron Bales, Lin Yuan, Minghe Lou and Minhan Lou of Rice, Linan Zhou of both Rice and South China University of Technology, Suman Khatiwada of Syzygy Plasmonics, and Junwei Lucas Bao of both Princeton and Boston College.
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