City
Epaper

2 IIT alumni developed sustainable fuel from 'thin air' and plastic waste

By IANS | Updated: June 20, 2023 20:25 IST

London, June 20 Two UK researchers, who are alumni of the Indian Institute of Technology (IIT), have developed ...

Open in App

London, June 20 Two UK researchers, who are alumni of the Indian Institute of Technology (IIT), have developed a new method to transform carbon dioxide (CO2) captured from industrial processes or even directly from the air to clean, sustainable fuels, using just the energy from the sun.

The researchers currently working at the Department of Chemistry in the University of Cambridge, UK, developed a solar-powered reactor that converts captured CO2 and plastic waste into sustainable fuels and other valuable chemical products.

In tests, CO2 was converted into syngas a key building block for sustainable liquid fuels , and plastic bottles were converted into glycolic acid, which is widely used in the cosmetics industry.

Although improvements are needed before this technology can be used at an industrial scale, the study, reported in the journal Joule, represents another important step toward the production of clean fuels to power the economy, without the need for environmentally destructive oil and gas extraction.

"This solar-powered system takes two harmful waste products plastic and carbon emissions and converts them into something truly useful," said Dr. Sayan Kar, an alumnus of IIT Kanpur.

"The fact that we can effectively take CO2 from air and make something useful from it is special. It's satisfying to see that we can actually do it using only sunlight," Kar said.

The researchers adapted their solar-driven technology so that it works with flue gas or directly from the air, converting CO2 and plastics into fuel and chemicals using only the power of the sun.

By bubbling air through the system containing an alkaline solution, the CO2 selectively gets trapped, and the other gases present in air, such as nitrogen and oxygen, harmlessly bubble out. This bubbling process allows the researchers to concentrate the CO2 from air in solution, making it easier to work with.

The integrated system contains a photocathode and an anode. The system has two compartments: on one side is captured CO2 solution that gets converted into syngas, a simple fuel. On the other side, plastics are converted into useful chemicals using only sunlight.

"The plastic component is an important trick to this system," said Dr. Motiar Rahaman, an alumnus of IIT Madras.

"Capturing and using CO2 from the air makes the chemistry more difficult. But, if we add plastic waste to the system, the plastic donates electrons to the CO2. The plastic breaks down to glycolic acid, which is widely used in the cosmetics industry, and the CO2 is converted into syngas, which is a simple fuel," he added.

The scientists are currently working on a bench-top demonstrator device with improved efficiency and practicality to highlight the benefits of coupling direct air capture with CO2 utilisation as a path to a zero-carbon future.


rvt/uk/

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: Department Of ChemistrySayan karLondonKanpurThe University Of LondonKanpur Lok SabhaIndian Institute Of TechnologySouth LondonQueen Mary University Of LondonIit KanpurMadame Tussauds LondonIndian Institute Of Technology Gandhinagar
Open in App

Related Stories

NationalYamuna Expressway Accident: 13 Injured as Passenger Bus Overturns After Colliding with Divider in UP

PuneNilesh Ghaywal, Pune Gangster and Accused in Kothrud Firing Case, Flees to London

BusinessTata Motors Shares Fall After JLR Faces ₹20,000 Crore Cyberattack Erasing FY25 Profits

NationalPassenger Spots Rat on IndiGo Aircraft; Delhi-Kanpur Flight Delayed by Three Hours

NationalKanpur-Varanasi Highway Accident: 4 Killed, 3 Injured As Vehicle Rams Into Stationary SUV in Prayagraj

International Realted Stories

InternationalIndia, Uzbekistan discuss measures to strengthen cooperation in counter-terrorism

InternationalSouth Korea: Court allows broadcast of ex-President Yoon's insurrection trial

International‘Take it to the world’: PoK activists seek international spotlight amid kill orders

InternationalPTI's Syed Zeeshan Haider praises PoJK protests, highlights Muzaffarabad's welcoming spirit

InternationalKremlin says negotiations with Ukraine on hold