| A Man’s Home is His Renewable Energy Castle, Thanks to New Fuel Cells | |
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The key is reducing the cost of fuel cells, which right now are expensive partly due to the use of platinum as a critical component. That’s where the new research comes in. At the recent 240th national meeting of the American Chemical Society, the MIT team described a powerful new catalyst that could help make the solar-fuel cell integrated system more affordable. The MIT Fuel Cell Breakthrough In the integrated solar and fuel cell system, solar energy would provide electricity to run an electrolyzer (a device that breaks down plain water into hydrogen and oxygen). It requires a catalyst to jumpstart the reaction, and until now the catalysts of choice have been based on platinum, which aside from being expensive involves the use of potentially toxic chemicals. MIT’s new catalyst requires no toxic chemicals and has the advantage of boosting oxygen production 200-fold. To complete the cycle, at night when the solar array ceases operation, the stored hydrogen and oxygen produce electricity in the fuel cell, and the byproduct of this reaction is potable water. The Road to Mass Market Fuel Cells SOURCE: GO Media - Written by Tina Casey - Image: Castle by Jim Linwood on flickr.com.
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