Credit: Aaron Sathrum, UCSD

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CO2 to Fuel

  • July 2007
  • By Kevin Bullis

With the help of catalyst.

   

Researchers at the University of California, San Diego, have shown that solar energy, with the help of catalysts, may be able to convert carbon dioxide into oxygen and carbon monoxide, which can then be used to make synthetic fuels.

Here's how it would work: sunlight passes through carbon dioxide dissolved in a solution and is absorbed by a semiconductor photocathode, which converts the photons into electrons. The resulting current splits the carbon dioxide, much the way electricity can split water into hydrogen and oxygen. But in this case, the splitting is aided by two catalysts. One, at the cathode, helps produce carbon monoxide. The anode is made of platinum, which catalyzes the production of oxygen.

 

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