« Geo-Greens, Take Two | Main | Nanotechnology and the Developing World »

Nano-Solar-H2

Three great ideas that go great together -- nanotechnology, solar power and hydrogen. We've mentioned before the growing use of nanoengineering to develop materials better able to split hydrogen from water using solar energy. Technology Research News brings word of another step in making this a reality.

Researchers from Pennsylvania State University have constructed a material made from titanium dioxide nanotubes that is 97 percent efficient at harvesting the ultraviolet portion of the sun's light and 6.8 percent efficient at extracting hydrogen from water.The material is easy to make, inexpensive, and photochemically stable, according to the researchers.

The downside is that only about five percent of the sun's energy hitting the earth is ultraviolet light; work continues to figure out how to shift the nanotube response to visible light. The original article appeared in Nano Letters; the full text (with illustrations) is available online.

Comments (3)

William Perron:

Is there a stock in this new technology that can be invested in? Thank you, William Perron

Is there a stock in this new technology that can be invested in? Thank you, William Perron

B. Haeberle:

Is there stock available for this technology?

Thanx B. Haeberle

About

This page contains a single entry from the blog posted on February 14, 2005 2:49 PM.

The previous post in this blog was Geo-Greens, Take Two.

The next post in this blog is Nanotechnology and the Developing World.

Many more can be found on the main index page or by looking through the archives.

Powered by
Movable Type 3.34