Intranet Catprocess
  1. The news
  2. The energy
  3. Technologies
  4. The actors
  5. Personalities
  6. Contacts
  1. 2013.03.04 "Artificial leaf" makes fuel from sunlight

    Solar cell bonded to recently developed catalyst can harness the sun, splitting water into hydrogen and oxygen.

    David L. Chandler, MIT News Office

    The 'artificial leaf,' a device that can harness sunlight to split water into hydrogen and oxygen without needing any external connections, is seen with some real leaves, which also convert the energy of sunlight directly into storable chemical form. Photo: Dominick Reuter

    Researchers led by MIT professor Daniel Nocera have produced something they’re calling an “artificial leaf”: Like living leaves, the device can turn the energy of sunlight directly into a chemical fuel that can be stored and used later as an energy source.

    The artificial leaf — a silicon solar cell with different catalytic materials bonded onto its two sides — needs no external wires or control circuits to operate. Simply placed in a container of water and exposed to sunlight, it quickly begins to generate streams of bubbles: oxygen bubbles from one side and hydrogen bubbles from the other. If placed in a container that has a barrier to separate the two sides, the two streams of bubbles can be collected and stored, and used later to deliver power: for example, by feeding them into a fuel cell that combines them once again into water while delivering an electric current.

    Read more and more

     

    Operating principle