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Beyond Carbon: Scientists Design A New Catalyst to Generate Green Fuel from Water

Date 2024.01.24. Writer 허선이 Hits 995

Globally, the transition to greener sources of energy requires the use of efficient catalysts for fuel generation reactions. Now, scientists at Dongguk University have synthesized an efficient catalyst for the oxygen evolution reaction — a component of water-splitting process that produces hydrogen and oxygen. The catalyst, synthesized using molybdenum and ruthenium, exhibits high activity, reaction rates, and durability, opening doors to the cost-effective and large-scale production of next-generation catalysts using diverse materials.
 
 
A Highly Active Molybdenum- and Ruthenium-Based Catalyst for Electrochemical Water Splitting
 
 
Chemical energy storage is a promising solution for circumventing the global energy challenges. Reduction of water to molecular hydrogen via the splitting water reaction is a key method. However, issues like low catalyst activity, slow reaction speed, and catalyst degradation pose challenges.
 
Now, in a recent study led by Professor Young-Kyu Han and Assistant Professor Jitendra N. Tiwari from the Department of Energy and Materials Engineering at Dongguk University, scientists have developed an effective oxygen evolution reaction catalyst with molybdenum and ruthenium. Their study was made available online on July 29, 2023, and published in Volume 339 of Applied Catalysis B: Environmental on December 15, 2023. According to Prof. Han, “Carbon materials are crucial for commercial acidic polymer electrolyte membrane water electrolyzers. At high voltages, however, carbon atoms degrade in strongly acidic media, necessitating the need for new catalyst materials beyond carbon materials.”
 
The study involved implanting ruthenium oxide into a two-dimensional molybdenum carbide to create a catalyst (Mo2TiC2Tx MXene) with high mass activity, turnover frequency, and durability. Calculations also indicated that the ruthenium sites had a strong affinity towards oxygen species, which enhanced the reaction.
 
These findings are significant, as the global aim is to achieve 80% renewable electricity by 2050. Hydrogen and oxygen have diverse industrial applications, spanning clean fuel, power generation, chemical production, and life-support systems. Notably, more than 90% of hydrogen is in petroleum recovery and refining (47%) and ammonia production (45%) alone.
 
The transportation sector will also benefit. Elaborating on this, Dr. Tiwari says, “The need for decarbonizing the transportation sector makes hydrogen a promising alternative. Going ahead, fuel cell vehicles are expected to efficiently convert hydrogen into electrical energy, emitting only water, with longer driving ranges than battery electric vehicles. Additionally, hydrogen fuel cells do not need recharging and don’t degrade if hydrogen fuel is present, unlike in batteries,” observes Dr. Tiwari. 
 
This study thus serves as a guide for researchers to create new catalysts for acidic water oxidation. It also sheds light on achieving cost-effective, large-scale catalyst production using diverse materials, such as dual-transition metal catalysts.
 
 
Reference
Title of original paper: Atomic layers of ruthenium oxide coupled with Mo2TiC2Tx MXene for exceptionally high catalytic activity toward water oxidation
Journal: Applied Catalysis B: Environmental  
DOI: 10.1016/j.apcatb.2023.123139  
 
*Corresponding authors’ emails: 
ykenergy@dongguk.edu (Y.-K. Han), jnt_tiw123@yahoo.co.in (J.N. Tiwari), and yunsuk.huh@inha.ac.kr (Y.S. Huh)
 
 
About Dongguk University
 
Dongguk University, founded in 1906, is located in Seoul, South Korea. It comprises 13 colleges that cover a variety of disciplines and has local campuses in Gyeongju, Goyang, and Los Angeles. The university has 1300 professors who conduct independent research and 18000 students undertaking studies in a variety of disciplines. Interaction between disciplines is one of the strengths on which Dongguk prides itself; the university encourages researchers to work across disciplines in Information Technology, Bio Technology, CT, and Buddhism. 
 
 
 
About the authors
 
Prof. Jitendra N. Tiwari is an Assistant Professor at the Department of Energy and Materials Engineering, Dongguk University, Seoul. His research focuses on the development of carbon and MXene-based catalysts and their applications in energy. He has worked as a postdoctoral, senior scientist, and research-assistant professor at NCTU (Taiwan), POSTECH (Pohang) and UNIST (Ulsan).
 
Prof. Young-Kyu Han is a Full Professor at the Department of Energy and Materials Engineering at Dongguk University, Seoul, Republic of Korea. His current research interests are the quantum simulations of battery and catalyst materials. He is also working on the design of new promising materials based on atomic-level simulation.