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Thursday, November 3, 2005
WRITER: Alan Flurry, 706/542-7825, aflurry@uga.edu CONTACT:
Yiping Zhao, 706/207-2501, zhaoy@phyast.uga.edu
Department of Energy grants fuel hydrogen research at UGA
ATHENS, Ga. – Incorporating nanostructures may lead to more
efficient hydrogen production and storage, according to researchers
from the University of Georgia and the University of California,
Santa Cruz who have secured $1.35 million in grants from the U.S.
Department of Energy (DOE) to work on clean energy technologies.
Yiping Zhao, assistant professor in the department
of physics and astronomy at UGA's Franklin College of Arts and
Sciences and a recognized expert in the fabrication of nanostructures,
is the principal investigator on the hydrogen storage aspect of
the multi-institution project.
The grants cover two distinct projects based on nanoscale materials
on which the researchers will collaborate; one is for generating
a solar cell device to produce hydrogen and one is using nanomaterials
to safely store the hydrogen. Both projects are dependent on the
materials to be designed and fabricated by Zhao at UGA, which will
then be characterized and tested by Jin Zhang at UCSC. Researchers
also involved are Mathew D. McCluskey from Washington State University
for the hydrogen storage project and Wei Chen from Nomadics, Inc.,
in the hydrogen generation project.
The grants are among 70 hydrogen research projects funded through
a $64 million DOE initiative aimed at making vehicles powered by
hydrogen fuel cells available, practical and affordable to American
consumers by 2020. Generating hydrogen from solar energy –
using it as a transportation fuel with only clean water as a byproduct
– would completely bypass fossil fuels as an energy source.
Still, significant technological barriers continue to block this
reality.
For example, about four kilograms of compressed hydrogen is needed
to drive an automobile 300 miles. The present state of the technology
would require a large volume, equal to about a 50-gallon drum, of
the volatile element to be stored in a vehicle for use. Zhao is
confident of reducing this volume with the use of nanostructures
as a storage mechanism.
“Nanostructures are important in hydrogen storage because
you have a higher surface area,” said Zhao. “But what
really sets this process apart is the nanofabrication techniques
– we can design better structures and incorporate more complex
materials, which is vital if this technology is to move forward.”
The research on materials and generating hydrogen from solar cells
will focus on the fundamental research needed to be able to mass
produce these technologies for a consumer market. The basics of
how hydrogen interacts with nanostructures, its diffusion and temperature
thresholds on the scale of a billionth of a meter hold the key for
its wider application.
“The one thing that we see on the hydrogen fuel front is
the government funding agencies beginning to work in concert with
many of our more innovative thinkers and engineers,” said
Dale Threadgill, director of the UGA Faculty of Engineering, which
sponsors Zhao’s work as a member and houses a laboratory dedicated
to nanoscale fabrication. “Dr. Zhao certainly counts among
these nationally.”
“I’m delighted that Dr. Zhao is receiving these important
grants from the Department of Energy,” said Garnett S. Stokes,
dean of the Franklin College of Arts and Sciences. “Clean,
affordable energy is critical to everyone, and we’re delighted
to have a part in this ongoing effort.”
“With these two projects, with the potential to turn water
into hydrogen using solar energy and then burn the hydrogen into
water as a fuel, we can have an inexhaustible source of clean energy,”
said Zhao.
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