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EES Lectureship Award at Clean Energy Conference

Presentation of EES readers choice lectureship

Winner of the 2013 EES Readers Choice Award Lecture Prof. Tom Jaramillo, and EES Deputy Editor Dr Heather Montgomery

Qingdao, China was the location for the lively and informative 2nd International Conference on Clean Energy Science (ICCES2), with lectures from key figures from around the world.

Energy & Environmental Science were delighted to present Professor Tom Jaramillo with the Energy & Environmental Science Readers’ Choice Lectureship Award at the event, and Prof. Jaramillo’s talk presenting insights on how to design a sustainable and efficient catalyst for CO2 reduction was very well received.

Prof. Jaramillo was awarded the lectureship for his EES article “New insights into the electrochemical reduction of carbon dioxide on metallic copper surfaces” which was one of the most downloaded articles in 2013.

To keep up to date with the latest published articles in Energy & Environmental Science, and our news and related events, sign up to our EES e-alerts and news service: http://www.rsc.org/Publishing/Journals/forms/V5profile.asp.

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Revealing electron transfer in current-producing bacteria

Researchers from Japan and the USA have found the first clue to the electron transfer mechanism in a species of current-producing bacteria.

Some bacteria can generate electrical energy from its metabolic systems, and they are used in microbial fuel cells and bioremediation processes. Geobacter sulfurreducens is the most efficient current-producing bacteria found so far, but there is no conclusive mechanism for electron transfer from the bacteria to the electrode.

In this paper, Ryuhei Nakamura et al. the authors identify self-secreted flavin as the electron shuttle involved in this extracellular electron transfer (EET). For this bacteria, free-floating flavin in the solution does not contribute to EET, as changing the solution to a fresh one did not impact current production. Instead, electron transfer occurs through flavin bound to c-type cytochromes (c-Cyts) on the outer membrane.

The authors confirmed flavin secretion by spectroscopy and mass chromatography, and voltammetry showed that current production was influenced by the amount of flavin present. The importance of c-Cyts was revealed by a mutant comparison experiment, in which a mutant lacking several major c-Cyts produced less current than the wild type.

Extracellular electron transfer (EET) is a key step in current production from bacteria, and understanding the mechanisms involved can lead to optimization of microbial fuel cells.

by Bhavin Siritanaratkul

For more information read this Energy & Environmental Science article:

Uptake of self-secreted flavins as bound cofactors for extracellular electron transfer in Geobacter species
Akihiro Okamoto, Koichiro Saito, Kengo Inoue, Kenneth H. Nealson, Kazuhito Hashimoto and Ryuhei Nakamura
DOI: 10.1039/C3EE43674H

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2nd International Conference on Clean Energy Science – oral abstract deadline approaching

2nd International Conference on Clean Energy Science (ICCES2) 13-16 April 2014, Qingdao, China

The oral abstract deadline for the 2nd International Conference on Clean Energy Science (ICCES2) is rapidly approaching so don’t miss your chance to take part in this important event and showcase your research alongside the following distinguished speakers:

  • Xinhe Bao
  • Guillermo Bazan
  • James Clark
  • Eric Diau
  • Shunichi Fukuzumi
  • Frederik Krebs
  • Changjun Liu
  • Rafael Luque
  • Doug MacFarlane
  • Ryong Ryoo
  • He Tian
  • Peng Wang
  • Shu-Hong Yu
  • Hua Zhang
  • Dongyuan Zhao

The oral abstract deadline is 5 January 2014. Submit an abstract today for your chance to present at this engaging event.

Submit

Energy & Environmental Science (EES) is pleased to support the conference and Professor Thomas Jaramillo will give the 2013 Energy & Environmental Science Readers’ Choice Award Lecture at the conference.

Many of the high profile speakers have published some of their best work in Energy & Environmental Science:

Read a selection of their articles today:

Food waste as a valuable resource for the production of chemicals, materials and fuels. Current situation and global perspective
Carol Sze Ki Lin, Lucie A. Pfaltzgraff, Lorenzo Herrero-Davila, Egid B. Mubofu, Solhy Abderrahim, James H. Clark, Apostolis A. Koutinas, Nikolaos Kopsahelis, Katerina Stamatelatou, Fiona Dickson, Samarthia Thankappan, Zahouily Mohamed, Robert Brocklesby and Rafael Luque
DOI: 10.1039/C2EE23440H

Very high energy density silicide–air primary batteries
Hua Zhang, Xing Zhong, Jonathan C. Shaw, Lixin Liu, Yu Huang and Xiangfeng Duan
DOI: 10.1039/C3EE41157E

New insights into the electrochemical reduction of carbon dioxide on metallic copper surfaces
Kendra P. Kuhl, Etosha R. Cave, David N. Abramc and Thomas F. Jaramillo
DOI: 10.1039/C2EE21234J

Flexible graphene–polyaniline composite paper for high-performance supercapacitor
Huai-Ping Cong, Xiao-Chen Ren, Ping Wang and Shu-Hong Yu
DOI: 10.1039/C2EE24203F

Highly active Pt–Fe bicomponent catalysts for CO oxidation in the presence and absence of H2
Hong Xu, Qiang Fu, Yunxi Yao and Xinhe Bao
DOI: 10.1039/C1EE02393D

All printed transparent electrodes through an electrical switching mechanism: A convincing alternative to indium-tin-oxide, silver and vacuum
Thue T. Larsen-Olsen, Roar R. Søndergaard, Kion Norrman, Mikkel Jørgensen and Frederik C. Krebs
DOI: 10.1039/C2EE23244H

Optimization of energy levels by molecular design: evaluation of bis-diketopyrrolopyrrole molecular donor materials for bulk heterojunction solar cell
Bright Walker, Jianhua Liu, Chunki Kim, Gregory C. Welch, Jin Keun Park, Jason Lin, Peter Zalar, Christopher M. Proctor, Jung Hwa Seo, Guillermo C. Bazan and Thuc-Quyen Nguyen
DOI: 10.1039/C3EE24351F

A facile approach for the synthesis of monolithic hierarchical porous carbons – high performance materials for amine based CO2 capture and supercapacitor electrode
Luis Estevez, Rubal Dua, Nidhi Bhandari, Anirudh Ramanujapuram, Peng Wang and Emmanuel P. Giannelis
DOI: 10.1039/C3EE40549D

Ordered mesoporous carbons and their corresponding column for highly efficient removal of microcystin-LR
Wei Teng, Zhangxiong Wu, Jianwei Fan, Hong Chen, Dan Feng, Yingying Lv, Jinxiu Wang, Abdullah M. Asiri and Dongyuan Zhao
DOI: 10.1039/C3EE41775A

High Seebeck coefficient redox ionic liquid electrolytes for thermal energy harvesting
Theodore J. Abraham, Douglas R. MacFarlane and Jennifer M. Pringle
DOI: 10.1039/C3EE41608A

Enveloping porphyrins for efficient dye-sensitized solar cells
Chin-Li Wang, Chi-Ming Lan, Shang-Hao Hong, Yi-Fen Wang, Tsung-Yu Pan, Chia-Wei Chang, Hshin-Hui Kuo, Ming-Yu Kuo, Eric Wei-Guang Diau and Ching-Yao Lin
DOI: 10.1039/C2EE03308A

Water-soluble mononuclear cobalt complexes with organic ligands acting as precatalysts for efficient photocatalytic water oxidation
Dachao Hong, Jieun Jung, Jiyun Park, Yusuke Yamada, Tomoyoshi Suenobu, Yong-Min Lee, Wonwoo Nam and Shunichi Fukuzumi
DOI: 10.1039/C2EE21185H

High-conversion-efficiency organic dye-sensitized solar cells: molecular engineering on D–A–π-A featured organic indoline dyes
Yongzhen Wu, Magdalena Marszalek, Shaik M. Zakeeruddin, Qiong Zhang, He Tian, Michael Grätzel and Weihong Zhu
DOI: 10.1039/C2EE22108J

For full details of how you can get involved in the 2nd International Conference on Clean Energy Science (ICCES2), please visit the dedicated webpage.

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Photophysical mechanisms for exceeding the Shockley-Queisser limit in solar energy conversion

Researchers are focused on novel solar cells designs with power conversion efficiencies that exceed the Shockely-Queisser limit. Hot carrier solar cells (HCSC) and multi-exciton generation (MEG) technology aim to reduce thermalization and band gap losses, which together account for >55% of the total absorbed solar energy.

Hot carrier equilibration and carrier multiplication in both molecular and nano materials are two photophysical mechanisms discussed in this paper for implementation in third generation photovoltaics.

Carrier-carrier scattering must be ensured to achieve high efficiency HCSC, as well as inefficient carrier-phonon scattering. The photon flux parameter is a challenge that still need to be addressed, but graphene and related two-dimensional materials seem to be promising.

Multi-exciton solar cells can offer an actual implementation especially for singlet fission in organic semiconductors, which have shown exceptional quantum efficiency of 200% and lots of potential for new molecule designs.

Interested in  better understanding this field? Read more in this Perspective article:

Exceeding the Shockley–Queisser limit in solar energy conversion
Cory A. Nelson, Nicholas R. Monahan and X.-Y. Zhu
DOI: 10.1039/C3EE42098A

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Professor Thomas Jaramillo wins 2013 EES Readers’ Choice Award and Lectureship

Professor Thomas JaramilloWe are delighted to announce that Professor Thomas Jaramillo been selected by the EES Editorial Board as the winner of the 2014 “Energy & Environmental Science Readers’ Choice Award and Lectureship” for his article “New insights into the electrochemical reduction of carbon dioxide on metallic copper surfaces“.

Based at Stanford University in the USA, Prof. Jaramillo’s research focuses on chemical transformations in energy. Specifically, his group studies the chemistry and physics of materials as they relate to catalyzing chemical reactions of interest, namely those that convert water and CO2 into fuels and chemicals utilizing renewable energy (e.g. solar or wind), and those that convert those fuels back into usable energy in the form of electricity.

Prof. Jaramillio will give his award lecture at the upcoming  2nd International Conference on Clean Energy Science (ICCES2) taking place in Qingdao, China from 13-16 April 2014. Please do consider joining us for this exciting event.

Read Prof. Jaramillo’s award winning research today:

New insights into the electrochemical reduction of carbon dioxide on metallic copper surfaces
Kendra P. Kuhl, Etosha R. Cave, David N. Abramc and Thomas F. Jaramillo
Energy Environ. Sci., 2012, 5, 7050-7059
DOI: 10.1039/C2EE21234J

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Improving solar cell efficiency by optical design

Table of contents imageScientists in the United States have designed a Cu2ZnSn(S, Se)4 (CZTSSe) solar cell with the greatest efficiency to date using an optical-design approach.

The researchers describe a new optical architecture for CZTSSe photovoltaic devices that improves the record power-conversion efficiency for this technology from 11.1 per cent to 12.0 per cent. CZTSSe absorbers are appealing for terawatt-scale thin-film solar deployment because they are composed of earth-abundant, non-toxic metals.

Using analytical modelling, verified by experiments, the team identified the optimal optical design for increasing the amount of light absorbed in the CZTSSe layer. The new design uses thinner CdS and transparent-conducting layers that lie atop the CZTSSe absorber.

The researchers also showed that that the approach typically used for solar-cell photon management – that is minimising the number of photons reflected from the solar cell surface – does not maximise current for this type of device.

Read the full details of this article in Energy & Environmental Science:

Optical designs that improve the efficiency of Cu2ZnSn(S,Se)4 solar cells
Mark T. Winkler, Wei Wang, Oki Gunawan, Harold J. Hovel, Teodor K. Todorov and David B. Mitzi
DOI: 10.1039/C3EE42541J

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The Storage Problem

Renewable, clean energy is all around us. In fact, the amount of solar and wind energy available for harvest is many times higher than the amount consumed by all of civilization. The single most important counter to solar and wind competing with fossil fuels is that they place us at the mercy of nature’s schedule. As a preferred option, historically we’ve gone to great lengths to find energy sources we can turn on and off at will. With the exception of hydro-electric, these technologies are all fuels.

A chemical fuel (as opposed to a nuclear fuel) stores energy between its atoms as molecular bonds. This energy is released as heat when the atoms are rearranged to combine with oxygen from the air; think of coal, gasoline, hydrogen, or wood pellets. As energy sources, chemical fuels are especially attractive because (1) they put lots of energy in a small place, (2) they’re inexpensive to store, (3) they’re easy to move around, and (4) whenever more power is needed it’s relatively simple to fire up more generators, or else shut excess generators off to save energy for later.

The way we spend energy demands the source have an on/off button, but sources of renewable energy can’t be switched on and off like fuels. If we want wind and solar energy to be as reliable as fuel, we have to store them. Storage is a bigger problem than you might think. If any storage technology were developed enough to handle the daily fluctuations in energy demand, our modern discussion over energy would be extremely different. In fact, if wind and solar were capable of providing energy when we want it, there would be little incentive to use fossil fuels. Proposed methods of storage can be boiled down to roughly 3 categories:

  • Electrical: Store renewable energy in giant batteries (or capacitors). When energy is desired, flip a switch.
  • Mechanical: Use renewable energy to pump water to a raised reservoir, spin a flywheel, or compress air. When energy is desired, have one of these technologies crank a generator.
  • Chemical: Turn renewable energy into fuel. When energy is desired, fire up a fuel-powered generator (or fuel cell).

Traditionally, solar and wind energy have been stored in batteries, but consider the advantages of storing this energy as fuel. To stockpile energy electrically we need lots of batteries; to stockpile energy as fuel we need only barrels and tanks. Compared to batteries, the materials and methods for manufacturing and recycling of barrels and tanks are enormously simpler and cheaper. Also, compared to the practically unlimited refilling capacity of barrels and tanks, batteries can be “refilled” only a few hundred times before they must be recycled. These simple reasons – combined with all the advantages of fuels discussed earlier – have convinced me that THE solution for solar and wind replacing fossil fuels is to use them to synthesize renewable fuel. Stated more clearly, we must use solar and wind energy to convert the products of fuel combustion (carbon dioxide and water) back into fuel.

The reason you hear so much about biotech when talking about sustainable energy is that plants and algae are critical to one particular method of using solar energy to turn carbon dioxide and water into fuel: biofuels. Unlike say, a mushroom, a plant gets its carbon from the air as it performs photosynthesis. This is why a tree doesn’t leave a hole in the ground as it grows, yet a mushroom deteriorates whatever it grows out of. Plants, in fact, are practically the only method of converting atmospheric carbon into anything; thermo- and electro-chemical processes generally require concentrated batches of carbon dioxide to work.

While plant products such as wood are technically fuels, they won’t work in your car without modifying either the fuel or the car. It would be hopelessly impractical to power all cars on wood chips (and people do actually do this; look up “woodgas”).  Rather, the study of biofuels generally revolves around converting plants into liquid fuel.

There are two halves to the study of biofuels. One half focuses the agricultural end; figuring out how to make plants produce more of the materials which are easy to convert into fuel and/or how to farm more of these plants sustainably. The other half focus on the conversion end; new techniques of thermo-, electro-, or bio-based conversion that can be used on the plants that are easier to grow and/or don’t directly interfere with food production (this is how nature works; the plant materials that are easy to convert tend to be edible).

While there’s true potential to bring renewable energy to the market using biofuels, it’s worth noting that biofuels offer only about 1-3% efficiency. That is to say, out of all the sunlight that falls on an acre of plants, only a small fraction of that energy will make it into the fuel made from those plants. Being mindful of this, there have been separate efforts to develop thermo- and electro-chemical techniques that use catalysts either with the sun’s heat or solar/wind electricity to produce fuel directly from water or stores of carbon dioxide. These technologies go by many names, but I tend to use “water splitting” (which produces hydrogen) and “carbon-dioxide splitting” (which produces carbon monoxide). Some of these technologies produce a mix of hydrogen and carbon monoxide known as “syngas”. These products may either be used as fuels in their own right, or else as precursors to more traditional fuels such as gasoline, jet fuel, or diesel. (For more information, read up on “synthetic fuel”.)

I hope this has outlined why energy storage is such an important issue and offered some understanding of the methods currently being evaluated and researched. Thanks for reading!

By Robert Coolman


You can read about some of the latest research which is helping to address these issues in the Energy & Environmental Science collection on New energy storage devices for post lithium-ion batteries.

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MIT group report efficient method for CO2 capture

Table of contents imageT. Alan Hatton et. al. describe the Electrochemically Mediated Amine Regeneration technique they have developed at MIT which is capable of capturing CO2 from coal-fired power plants in a much more efficient way than the current state-of-the-art technologies.

This exciting work is available to everyone via Open Access and was featured in tce today.

Read the full details of this HOT article:

Post-combustion carbon dioxide capture using electrochemically mediated amine regeneration
Michael C. Stern, Fritz Simeon, Howard Herzog and T. Alan Hatton
DOI: 10.1039/C3EE41165F

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Bacterium breaks down grass into biofuel

Table of contents imageResearch published in Energy & Environmental Science reports the discovery of the first microorganism that anaerobically degrades plant biomass, without the need for chemical pre-treatment, to produce raw materials that can be converted to biofuels.

Scientists in the United States demonstrated that Caldicellulosiruptor bescii bacterium was able to degrade insoluble switchgrass biomass at 78 °C. Biomass typically needs to be pretreated with strong acids at high temperatures to break it down into usable raw materials for biofuel conversion, but current industrial pre-treatment processes are inefficient and expensive, and can pollute the environment.

Analysis of the culture after incubation with C. bescii showed that the bacterium had broken down all three components of insoluble biomass – cellulose, hemicellulose and lignin, which is notoriously difficult to degrade. No other anaerobic mircroorganism that can degrade lignin is currently known.

Read the full details of this exciting development today:

Carbohydrate and lignin are simultaneously solubilized from unpretreated switchgrass by microbial action at high temperature
Irina Kataeva, Marcus B. Foston, Sung-Jae Yang, Sivakumar Pattathil, Ajaya K. Biswal, Farris L. Poole II, Mirko Basen, Amanda M. Rhaesa, Tina P. Thomas, Parastoo Azadi, Victor Olman, Trina D. Saffold, Kyle E. Mohler, Derrick L. Lewis, Crissa Doeppke, Yining Zeng, Timothy J. Tschaplinski, William S. York, Mark Davis, Debra Mohnen, Ying Xu, Art J. Ragauskas, Shi-You Ding, Robert M. Kelly, Michael G. Hahnbdh and Michael W. W. Adams
DOI: 10.1039/C3EE40932E

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“Reinventing fire” with Prof. Amory Lovins

Prof. Amory LovinsProfessor Amory Lovins is cofounder, Chairman, and Chief Scientist of Rocky Mountain
Institute (RMI, www.rmi.org), an independent nonprofit think-and-do tank that drives the efficient and restorative use of resources.

Prof. Lovins spoke yesterday at Imperial College, London as part of their Energy Futures Lab initiative about the ideas in his 2011 business book “Reinventing Fire“. His analysis has shown that it would be possible to run a 2.6x-bigger US economy in 2050 with no oil, coal, or nuclear energy and one-third less natural gas at a much lower cost, with lower CO2 emissions and in a way that is led by business for profit.

You can read Prof. Lovins’ Opinion article in Energy & Environmental Science:

Profitable climate solutions: Correcting the sign error
Amory B. Lovins
Energy Environ. Sci., 2009, 2, 15-18
DOI: 10.1039/B814525N

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