2010-03-29

Making Car Fuel from Air

Making Fuel From Air: Three British Universities Team to Develop Nanomaterials to Capture CO2 and Transform It to Fuel and Plastics


Funding of $2.08 million (£1.4 million) to develop porous nanomaterials that absorb CO2 and convert it into new products such as car fuel and plastics has been awarded to three universities in the South West of Britain.  The research, led by the University of Bath, will also involve scientists and engineers from the Universities of Bristol and the West of England

The researchers will be developing Metal Organic Frameworks (MOF) which can store gases like CO2 and use catalysts to convert them into fuel or plastics. 




Making Car Fuel from Thin Air

[...]
The project aims to develop porous materials that can absorb the gas that causes global warming and convert it into chemicals that can be used to make car fuel or plastics in a process powered by renewable solar energy.

The researchers hope that in the future the porous materials could be used to line factory chimneys to take carbon dioxide pollutants from the air, reducing the effects of climate change.

Clipped from: I-SEE

University of Bath

I-SEE: Institute for sustainable energy and the environment

Sustainable energy and the environment

The University of Bath across the range of its academic interests possesses high-level interdisciplinary research expertise in relation to energy, sustainability and the environment. This is reflected in the involvement of Bath researchers in many of the major environment and energy research council programmes resulting in a considerable portfolio of research expertise and current projects spread across the University.


£1.4 million to make car fuel from thin air


 Press release issued 23 March 2010

[...]
Dr. David Fermin, from the University of Bristol, said: "Currently, there are no large-scale technologies available for capturing and processing CO2 from air. The fact is that CO2 is rather diluted in the atmosphere and its chemical reactivity is very low. By combining clever material design with heterogeneous catalysis, electrocatalysis and biocatalysis, we aim to develop an effective carbon neutral technology."

The Bath-Bristol collaboration brings together scientists from a range of disciplines, with researchers from Bath’s Institute for Sustainable Energy & the Environment (I-SEE), the School of Chemistry at the University of Bristol, and the School of Life Sciences at the University of the West of England.


School of Life Sciences
Home page of UWE Bristol

The School of Life Sciences supports a diversity of teaching, research and knowledge exchange activity with a focus on the applications of science and its impact on real world problems.
Find out more about Life Sciences


Sources:
  1. Making Fuel From Air: Three British Universities Team to Develop Nanomaterials to Capture CO2 and Transform It to Fuel and Plastics - Renewable Energy - Zimbio
  2. Making car fuel from thin air
  3. I-SEE
  4. Bristol University | News from the University | Carbon capture
  5. School of Life Sciences - UWE Bristol
Related:
  1. Research to make car fuel from thin air
  2. Homepage | University of Bath
  3. I-SEE: Research Themes
  4. Bristol University homepage - a place for learning, discovery and enterprise
  5. Electrochemistry Group - School of Chemistry - Bristol University