Enzyme cocktail converts cellulosic materials, water into hydrogen fuel
Tomorrow's fuel-cell vehicles may be powered by enzymes that consume cellulose from woodchips or grass and exhale hydrogen. Researchers at Virginia Tech, Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL), and the University of Georgia have produced hydrogen gas pure enough to power a fuel cell by mixing 14 enzymes, one coenzyme, cellulosic materials from nonfood sources, and water heated to about 90 degrees (32 C).
The group announced three advances from their "one pot" process: 1) a novel combination of enzymes, 2) an increased hydrogen generation rate -- to as fast as natural hydrogen fermentation, and 3) a chemical energy output greater than the chemical energy stored in sugars – the highest hydrogen yield reported from cellulosic materials. "In addition to converting the chemical energy from the sugar, the process also converts the low-temperature thermal energy into high-quality hydrogen energy – like Prometheus stealing fire," said Percival Zhang, assistant professor of biological systems engineering in the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences at Virginia Tech.
"It is exciting because using cellulose instead of starch expands the renewable resource for producing hydrogen to include biomass," said Jonathan Mielenz, leader of the Bioconversion Science and Technology Group at ORNL.
The researchers used cellulosic materials isolated from wood chips, but crop waste or switchgrass could also be used. "If a small fraction – 2 or 3 percent – of yearly biomass production were used for sugar-to-hydrogen fuel cells for transportation, we could reach transportation fuel independence," Zhang said. (He added that the 3 percent figure is for global transportation needs. The U.S. would actually need to convert about 10 percent of biomass – which would be 1.3 billion tons of usable biomass).
Source: Virginia Tech
Related
- Say hello to cheaper hydrogen fuel cellsThu, 21 Apr 2011, 14:36:03 EDT
- UT Knoxville and ORNL researchers turn algae into high-temperature hydrogen sourceThu, 12 Nov 2009, 10:29:44 EST
- Fuel from food waste: bacteria provide powerWed, 16 Jul 2008, 19:36:12 EDT
- Hydrogen storage gets new hopeTue, 1 Sep 2009, 14:29:15 EDT
- Story tips from the Departments of Energy's Oak Ridge National Lab -- March 2009Mon, 2 Mar 2009, 17:54:11 EST
Other sources
- Enzyme cocktail converts cellulosic materials, water into hydrogen fuelfrom Science CentricThu, 12 Feb 2009, 6:43:20 EST
- Enzyme cocktail converts cellulosic materials, water into hydrogen fuelfrom PhysorgWed, 11 Feb 2009, 17:07:07 EST
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