Light makes Rice U. catalyst more effective: Halas lab details plasmonic effect that allows catalyst
Light makes Rice U. catalyst more effective: Halas lab details plasmonic effect that allows catalyst to work at lower energy Rice University nanoscientists have demonstrated a new catalyst that can convert ammonia into hydrogen fuel at ambient pressure using only light energy, mainly due to a plasmonic effect that makes the catalyst more efficient. […] A study from Rice’s Laboratory for Nanophotonics (LANP) in this week’s issue of Science describes the new catalytic nanoparticles, which are made mostly of copper with trace amounts of ruthenium metal. Tests showed the catalyst benefited from a light-induced electronic process that significantly lowered the “activation barrier,” or minimum energy needed, for the ruthenium to break apart ammonia molecules.The research comes as governments and industry are investing billions of dollars to develop infrastructure and markets for carbon-free liquid ammonia fuel that will not contribute to greenhouse warming. But the researchers say the plasmonic effect could have implications beyond the “ammonia economy.” Read more. -- source link
#materials science#science#plasmonics#catalysts#nanotechnology#nanoparticles#rice university#copper#ruthenium#ammonia