Renewable Energy

IIT-G developing solar-powered hydrogen generator

Indian Institute of Technology-Guwahati researchers are developing cost-efficient materials to generate energy-rich hydrogen from water using sunlight leading to cost-effective solar-powered hydrogen generators.

Pursuant of worldwide efforts in developing clean and renewable energy, the IIT-G researchers are developing novel materials that can use sunlight to split water into hydrogen and oxygen, said a release from the Institute on Monday.

โ€œThese materials are much cheaper than the โ€˜noble metalsโ€™ currently used and could lead to cost-effective solar-powered hydrogen generatorsโ€, stated the release.

On the area of research for the team from the Department of Chemistry at IIT Guwahati led by Dr Mohammad Qureshi, it said besides the commonly known โ€˜solar cellsโ€™ converting light directly into electrical energy, there is another type of sunlight-powered energy conversion system called โ€˜PhotoElectroChemicalโ€™ (PEC) that directly produce fuels in combination of electrical energy.

PEC cells use solar energy to split simple and safe compounds such as water into hydrogen and oxygen, hydrogen being a high-energy fuel that can be stored and used as needed, the release said.

โ€œThese cells are therefore considered the โ€˜Holy Grailโ€™ to a carbon-free hydrogen economyโ€, it added. The IIT-G research team has reported their recent findings in the prestigious peer-reviewed Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters of the American Chemical Society.

The paper has been co-authored by Prof Mohammad Qureshi and Suhaib Alam.

Elaborating the importance of this research, Dr Qureshi, Professor in Department of Chemistry, IIT Guwahati, said, โ€œdespite the promise, PEC cells are not yet a practical solution to the energy crisis because of the scientific bottlenecks such as the sluggishness of the water-oxidation process. Catalysts are used to activate the water-splitting process but these catalysts are expensive metals such as platinum, iridium and ruthenium, among others, which render the cells impractical.โ€

The team at IIT Guwahati has developed non-noble metal catalysts that are as good as the expensive metals in splitting water in PEC cells, said Dr Qureshi.

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