Top 10 most-read EES articles – Q3 2013

This month sees the following articles in Energy & Environmental Science that are in the top 10 most accessed from July – September:

The energetic implications of curtailing versus storing solar- and wind-generated electricity
Charles J. Barnhart, Michael Dale, Adam R. Brandt and Sally M. Benson
Energy Environ. Sci., 2013,6, 2804-2810
DOI: 10.1039/C3EE41973H

Low-temperature processed meso-superstructured to thin-film perovskite solar cells
James M. Ball, Michael M. Lee, Andrew Hey and Henry J. Snaith
Energy Environ. Sci., 2013,6, 1739-1743
DOI: 10.1039/C3EE40810H

Assessing the drivers of regional trends in solar photovoltaic manufacturing
Alan C. Goodrich, Douglas M. Powell, Ted L. James, Michael Woodhouse and Tonio Buonassisi
Energy Environ. Sci., 2013,6, 2811-2821
DOI: 10.1039/C3EE40701B

Challenges in the development of advanced Li-ion batteries: a review
Vinodkumar Etacheri, Rotem Marom, Ran Elazari, Gregory Salitra and Doron Aurbach
Energy Environ. Sci., 2011,4, 3243-3262
DOI: 10.1039/C1EE01598B

Ultrathin amorphous zinc-tin-oxide buffer layer for enhancing heterojunction interface quality in metal-oxide solar cells
Yun Seog Lee, Jaeyeong Heo, Sin Cheng Siah, Jonathan P. Mailoa, Riley E. Brandt, Sang Bok Kim, Roy G. Gordon and Tonio Buonassisi
Energy Environ. Sci., 2013,6, 2112-2118
DOI: 10.1039/C3EE24461J

Room-temperature stationary sodium-ion batteries for large-scale electric energy storage
Huilin Pan, Yong-Sheng Hu and Liquan Chen
Energy Environ. Sci., 2013,6, 2338-2360
DOI: 10.1039/C3EE40847G

Graphene based new energy materials
Yiqing Sun, Qiong Wu and Gaoquan Shi
Energy Environ. Sci., 2011,4, 1113-1132
DOI: 10.1039/C0EE00683A

Highly efficient organic tandem solar cells: a follow up review
Tayebeh Ameri, Ning Li and Christoph J. Brabec
Energy Environ. Sci., 2013,6, 2390-2413
DOI: 10.1039/C3EE40388B

3D carbon based nanostructures for advanced supercapacitors
Hao Jiang, Pooi See Lee and Chunzhong Li
Energy Environ. Sci., 2013,6, 41-53
DOI: 10.1039/C2EE23284G

New energy storage devices for post lithium-ion batteries
Haoshen Zhou
Energy Environ. Sci., 2013,6, 2256-2256
DOI: 10.1039/C3EE90024J

Why not take a look at the articles today and blog your thoughts and comments below

Fancy submitting an article to EES? Then why not submit to us today!

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Beyond incineration, beyond recycling: the myriad uses of “waste” plastics, present and future

By Benjamin Britton, EES Guest Web-Writer

By reviewing both current laboratory and industrial-scale reactors and emerging technologies, Baytekin, Baytekin and Grzybowski offer strategic alternatives to incineration that usefully could harness the giant potential energy found in discarded synthetic polymers through their Energy and Environmental Science article, Retrieving and converting energy from polymers: deployable technologies and emerging concepts.

Plastics constitute many millions of tonnes of waste globally each year – 28 million tonnes in the United States alone, a waste approaching a trillion MJ of energy. Less than 10% of polymers are recycled effectively and 12% are incinerated, but incineration of plastics merely substitutes one pollutant for many; these authors offer real, clean, and effective alternatives that make better use of this energy reserve, some presently feasible on the industrial scale and others still in development. Anyone with an interest in emerging energy technologies, energy policy, industrial chemistry, active polymers, or green chemistry would certainly read this article with great interest.

One high-value recycling strategy is chemical degradation of polymers – mainly by heating under inert, partial O2, or H2 atmospheres – to surprisingly useful ends. In one instance, PMMA yields its monomer, methylmethacrylate, at a yield of 97%. Polymers with high levels of impurities can be converted into fuels such as diesel, coke, and hydrogen at high qualities, with high efficiency, and on the industrial scale. The authors also discuss more exotic energy interconversions involving polymers, presently being developed, among them mechanical to electrical energy interconversion via triboelectric and piezoelectric generators and heat to electrical energy interconversion via polymer thermoelectrics, adding a vision of future possibilities to this already enthralling read.

Read the article in EES:

Retrieving andconverting energy from polymers: deployable technologies and emerging concepts
Bilge Baytekin, H. Tarik Baytekin, and Bartosz A. Grybowski
DOI: 10.1039/C3EE41360H

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SuNEC 2013: There is Enough Sun for All

Jointly organized by the Institute of Nanostructured Materials of Italy’s Research Council (CNR) and by Palermo’s University Department of Electrical Engineering (DEIM), the third “SuNEC – Sun New Energy Conference” was held in Santa Flavia, Sicily, on September 10-12, 2013.

The lectures, oral presentations and poster presentations highlighted approaches to exploit solar energy, including concentrated solar power, thin-film photovoltaics, artifical photosynthesis and solar thermal energy.

Invited speakers at SuNEC 2013 included Yu A. Baurov (Russian Academy of the Sciences), Wai-Yeung Wong (Hong Kong Baptist University) Antonino S. Aricò (CNR, Italy), Francesco Meneguzzo (CNR, Italy) as well as novelist and thinker Ottavio Cappellani (Catania, Italy).

The winner of the 2013 Poster presentation was Maria Rita Girolamo.

The 4th edition of the SuNEC Conference will be held in Sicily again, on the 8-10th September 2014. Interested scientists can easily register online at www.solar-conference.eu.

You might be interested in these articles in EES:

Solar hydrogen: fuel of the near future
Mario Pagliaro, Athanasios G. Konstandopoulos, Rosaria Ciriminna and Giovanni Palmisano
Journal Article Energy Environ. Sci., 2010,3, 279-287
DOI: 10.1039/B923793N, Perspective

Solar cells with one-day energy payback for the factories of the future
Nieves Espinosa, Markus Hösel, Dechan Angmo and Frederik C. Krebs
Journal Article Energy Environ. Sci., 2012,5, 5117-5132
DOI: 10.1039/C1EE02728J, Analysis

Plasmonic solar water splitting
Scott C. Warren and Elijah Thimsen
Journal Article Energy Environ. Sci., 2012,5, 5133-5146
DOI: 10.1039/C1EE02875H, Review Article

You might also be interested in our solar fuels and solar photovoltaics collections.

View “A focus on solar photovoltaics”

View “A Focus on Solar Fuels and Artificial Photosynthesis”

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Indirect Nanoplasmonic Sensing for In Situ Studies of Dye-Sensitized Solar Cells

Prineha Narang is a guest web-writer for EES. Pri is a Ph.D. student in Applied Physics with Profs. Harry A. Atwater and Nathan S. Lewis at Caltech. Outside the lab, she spends her time climbing mountains and running.

Researchers led by Professor Christoph Langhammer have developed a novel tool based on indirect nanoplasmonic sensing for in situ studies of dye-sensitized solar cells (DSSCs). Their work elucidates the kinetics of dye impregnation into mesoporous TiO2, known to be a critical step in fabrication of DSSCs and therefore important for scale-up of DSSCs.

DSSCs offer a potentially low-cost, aesthetically appealing alternative to conventional silicon based technologies. The key components of a cell are a TiO2 film filled with a densely packed monolayer of photon absorbing dye molecules and an electrolyte. Mechanism-oriented tools and studies are needed to understand how to reproducibly form an optimal dye monolayer on the TiO2 and how to make the DSSC fabrication process compatible with industrial demands. Langhammer’s group has done exactly that by using a new method to follow the dye impregnation process in detail.

The researchers use Hidden Interface-Indirect Nanoplasmonic Sensing (HI-INPS), a technique that uses the localized surface plasmon resonance of Au nanoparticles (coated with a thin dielectric layer). When illuminated with near-visible light, their sensitivity to dielectric changes. This sensitivity is short- ranged, typically within 50–100 nm from the sensor particle surface. Therefore if a thick layer of material, like mesoporous TiO2, is deposited onto such a sensor chip, the plasmonic Au sensor particles probe the hidden interface region between the sensor chip surface and the sample material. HI-INPS is a neat way to monitor the dye molecule adsorption without disturbing the DSSC.

They use a combination of quantitative experimental data for the time it takes the dye molecules to diffuse with a simple theoretical model incorporating fast adsorption and diffusion through the porous system, to get values for the effective diffusion coefficient in the porous structure. They have successfully demonstrated the HI-INPS technique in the context of DSSCs. The technique is very general and has a lot potential in other diffusion studies in nano- and microporous materials.

Read the paper here:

Diffusion and adsorption of dye molecules in mesoporous TiO2 photoelectrodes studied by indirect nanoplasmonic sensing
Viktoria Gusak, Leo-Philipp Heiniger, Vladimir P. Zhdanov, Michael Grätzel, Bengt Kasemo and Christoph Langhammer
DOI: 10.1039/C3EE42352B

By Prineha Narang

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Powering Growth through Open Innovation: Register for the Chemistry World Webinar

Do you want to embrace open innovation, but not sure where to start? This webinar will provide a short overview of the open innovation concept, the best practice and platforms used by Syngenta to engage with innovation from anywhere in support of its corporate ambition “to bring greater food security in an environmentally sustainable way to an increasing populous world by creating a worldwide step-change in farm productivity

Our next free, one hour, interactive Chemistry World Webinar, being streamed on Thursday 24 October at 12:00 (BST), will provide a short overview of the open innovation concept, the best practice and platforms.

Register here or add this event to your calendar

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Renewable Energy Storage in Biomass?

Michael Doud is a guest web-writer for Energy and Environmental Science. Michael is a PhD student in Professor Clifford P. Kubiak’s group at the University of California, San Diego. In addition to practicing chemistry, he is an avid hiker and eater, and maintains dreams of basketball stardom.

Researchers at TU Braunschweig under the direction of Professor Uwe Schröder have demonstrated highly selective electrochemical hydrogenation of two furanics, common biomass derivatives.

Chemical hydrogenation of biomass substrates can be a difficult prospect.  High pressures of H2 at high temperature would make any chemist with a reasonable expectation of longevity understandably squeamish.  According to research from the University of Technology at Braunschweig, a potentiostat may be the organic chemist’s best friend.

In their recent article in EES, the authors, Schröder and Nilges, demonstrate the electrochemical conversion of furfural and 5-hydroxymethylfurfural to 2-methylfuran and 2,5-dimethylfuran, respectively.  These substrates are derived from lignocellulosic biomass or from polysaccharides such as cellulose and starch.  By demonstrating selective electroorganic reduction at copper and lead electrodes, this work opens the possibility of inexpensive electrochemical reactors that could improve the value of biomass-derived compounds.

One main problem is the competing hydrogen evolution reaction (HER).  This is a common hurdle for reductive electrochemistry on most electrode surfaces and can severely limit Faradaic efficiency.  The authors report that for this system, running high concentrations (500 mM) of substrate can reduce percentage of electrons lost to HER.  While this presents a challenge for scaling-up, these products actually separate from the aqueous electrolyte solution, forming another phase that is relatively easy to remove.

Looking to the future, this work represents an intriguing combination of renewable energy strategies – using renewable sources of energy to convert biomass to more useful or at least more energy dense chemicals.  Certainly, the energy future poses some daunting challenges that resist any single silver bullet.  By combining renewable energy storage with biofuel substrates, some challenging steps in both fields might be avoidable.

By Michael Doud

Read the article in EES:

Electrochemistry for biofuel generation: production of furans by electrocatalytic hydrogenation of furfurals
Peter Nilges and Uwe Schröder
DOI: 10.1039/C3EE41857J, Communication

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This week’s HOT articles

Exciton diffusion in organic photovoltaic cells
S. Matthew Menke and Russell J. Holmes
DOI: 10.1039/C3EE42444H, Review Article

A carbon quantum dot decorated RuO2 network: outstanding supercapacitances under ultrafast charge and discharge
Yirong Zhu, Xiaobo Ji, Chenchi Pan, Qingqing Sun, Weixin Song, Laibing Fang, Qiyuan Chen and Craig E. Banks
DOI: 10.1039/C3EE41776J, Paper

First-row transition metal dichalcogenide catalysts for hydrogen evolution reaction
Desheng Kong, Judy J. Cha, Haotian Wang, Hye Ryoung Lee and Yi Cui
DOI: 10.1039/C3EE42413H, Communication

A monolithic device for solar water splitting based on series interconnected thin film absorbers reaching over 10% solar-to-hydrogen efficiency
T. Jesper Jacobsson, Viktor Fjällström, Martin Sahlberg, Marika Edoff and Tomas Edvinsson
DOI: 10.1039/C3EE42519C, Paper

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Solar water splitting: 10 % solar-to-hydrogen conversion efficiency using series interconnected thin-film absorbers

Aled is a new guest web-writer for EES. Aled is a PhD student working on new carbon-based porous materials for the Li-ion battery. He is currently based in Liverpool, but will be moving to Singapore for two years from April 2014. Outside of science, his interests include politics, sustainability and international development.

Researchers from Sweden have demonstrated a process where the crucial 10 % solar-to-hydrogen (STH) efficiency threshold – required for a device to be considered commercially viable – is met by connecting a number of solar-absorbers in series along with a Pt-based catalyst.

Harnessing the power of the sun to directly split water in order to produce hydrogen is anticipated to be an important process in post-carbon, green economies.

Normally there is a trade-off between high solar-absorption and high water splitting efficiency due to the mismatch between the energy required for water splitting (about 2 eV) and the most efficient band-gap for harvesting solar light (about 1.35 eV).

In their recent article, the research group from Uppsala University have overcome this problem by interconnecting 3 cells, based on the semiconductor CuInxGa1-xSe2 (CIGS), into a single monolithic device. By placing the semiconductors in series, and tuning them for efficient absorption of the solar spectrum (achieved by varying the In:Ga ratio), their device can have both a high solar absorption efficiency and a sufficiently high electrochemical potential to drive the water splitting reaction.

Due to the relative simplicity of the approach, the authors suggest that this may be an economically compatible route to green H2 production. What’s more, they claim that this novel approach has room for an increase of several percentage points in STH efficiency, and that it has opened the door to many other photoabsorbers, which were previously disregarded due to too-low band gaps, being re-investigated. In any case, the outlook for this field certainly looks bright.

By Aled D. Roberts

Take a look at the article in EES:

A monolithic device for solar water splitting based on series interconnected thin film absorbers reaching over 10 % solar-to-hydrogen efficiency
Jesper Tor Jacobsson, Viktor Fjällström, Martin Sahlberg, Marika Edoff and Tomas Edvinsson
DOI: 10.1039/C3EE42519C, Paper

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This week’s HOT articles

These articles are HOT as recommended by the referees

Take a look at this week’s selection…

Retrieving and converting energy from polymers: deployable technologies and emerging concepts
Bilge Baytekin, H. Tarik Baytekin and Bartosz A. Grzybowski  

 

 

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

N-doped monolayer graphene catalyst on silicon photocathode for hydrogen production
Uk Sim, Tae-Youl Yang, Joonhee Moon, Junghyun An, Jinyeon Hwang, Jung-Hye Seo, Jouhahn Lee, Kye Yeop Kim, Joohee Lee, Seungwu Han, Byung Hee Hong and Ki Tae Nam   

 

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2nd International Conference on Clean Energy Sciences

The 2nd International Conference on Clean Energy Sciences (ICCES2) will take place on the 13-16 April 2014 in Qingdao, China.

The search for sources of clean energy is becoming increasingly urgent as the supply of available energy from fossil fuels decreases and concerns increase about their environmental impact. Alternative sources of clean energy, such as solar energy and biofuels offer great potential; however there are big challenges to be overcome before current clean energy generation and energy storage technologies make these a viable alternative.

This 2nd International Conference on Clean Energy offers a unique opportunity for international researchers to discuss the latest developments in clean energy and energy storage research, and the fundamental issues surrounding the scientific challenges faced ahead.

Important dates:

Deadline for oral abstract submission: 10 November, 2013
Deadline for poster abstract submission: 9 January, 2014
Deadline for early registration: 30 January, 2014
Deadline for normal registration: 13 March, 2014

More information can be found on the website: www.icces.cn

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