| New
Brunswick/Piscataway, NJ | March 28, 2005 ---Say “nanotechnology”
and people are likely to think of micro machines or
zippy computer chips. But in a new twist, Rutgers scientists
are using nanotechnology in chemical reactions that
could provide hydrogen for tomorrow’s fuel-cell powered
clean energy vehicles.
In a paper to be published
April 20 in the Journal of the American Chemical Society,
researchers at Rutgers, The State University of New
Jersey, describe how they make a finely textured surface
of the metal iridium that can be used to extract hydrogen
from ammonia, then captured and fed to a fuel cell.
The metal’s unique surface consists of millions of
pyramids with facets as tiny as five nanometers (five
billionths of a meter) across, onto which ammonia
molecules can nestle like matching puzzle pieces.
This sets up the molecules to undergo complete and
efficient decomposition.
“The nanostructured surfaces
we’re examining are model catalysts,” said Ted Madey,
State of New Jersey professor of surface science in
the physics department at Rutgers. “They also have
the potential to catalyze chemical reactions for the
chemical and pharmaceutical industries.”
A major obstacle to establishing
the “hydrogen economy” is the safe and cost-effective
storage and transport of hydrogen fuel. The newly
discovered process could contribute to the solution
of this problem. Handling hydrogen in its native form,
as a light and highly flammable gas, poses daunting
engineering challenges and would require building
a new fuel distribution infrastructure from scratch.
By using established processes
to bind hydrogen with atmospheric nitrogen into ammonia
molecules (which are simply one atom of nitrogen and
three atoms of hydrogen), the resulting liquid could
be handled much like today’s gasoline and diesel fuel.
Then using nanostructured catalysts based on the one
being developed at Rutgers, pure hydrogen could be
extracted under the vehicle’s hood on demand, as needed
by the fuel cell, and the remaining nitrogen harmlessly
released back into the atmosphere. The carbon-free
nature of ammonia would also make the fuel cell catalyst
less susceptible to deactivation.
When developing industrial
catalysts, scientists and engineers have traditionally
focused on how fast they could drive a chemical reaction.
In such situations, however, catalysts often drive
more than one reaction, yielding unwanted byproducts
that have to be separated out. Also, traditional catalysts
sometimes lose strength in the reaction process. Madey
says that these problems could be minimized by tailoring
nanostructured metal surfaces on supported industrial
catalysts, making new forms of catalysts that are
more robust and selective.
In the journal article, Madey
and postdoctoral research fellow Wenhua Chen and physics
graduate student Ivan Ermanoski describe how a flat
surface of iridium heated in the presence of oxygen
changes its shape to make uniform arrays of nanosized
pyramids. The structures arise when atomic forces
from the adjacent oxygen atoms pull metal atoms into
a more tightly ordered crystalline state at temperatures
above 300 degrees Celsius (or approximately 600 degrees
Fahrenheit). Different annealing temperatures create
different sized facets, which affect how well the
iridium catalyzes ammonia decomposition. The researchers
are performing additional studies to characterize
the process more completely.
The Rutgers researchers are
conducting their work in the university’s Laboratory
for Surface Modification, which provides a focus for
research into atomic-level phenomena that occur on
the surface of solids. It involves the overlapping
disciplines of physics, chemistry, materials science
and engineering. Their work is supported in part by
grants from the U. S. Department of Energy’s Office
of Basic Energy Sciences.
Contact:
Carl Blesch
732/932-7084, ext. 616
cblesch@ur.rutgers.edu
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State University of New Jersey
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