Drop-in Fuels from Sunlight and Air
Autor: | Alexander Muroyama, Johan Lilliestam, Aldo Steinfeld, Anthony Patt, Remo Schäppi, Philipp Haueter, Philipp Furler, Fabian Dähler, David Rutz |
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Jazyk: | angličtina |
Předmět: |
Kerosene
Multidisciplinary Waste management Aviation business.industry 020209 energy 02 engineering and technology Raw material 021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology Solar fuel 7. Clean energy Diesel fuel 13. Climate action Hydrogen fuel 0202 electrical engineering electronic engineering information engineering Environmental science Production (economics) Gasoline 0210 nano-technology business |
Zdroj: | Nature Nature, 601 (7891) |
ISSN: | 1476-4687 0028-0836 |
DOI: | 10.1038/s41586-021-04174-y |
Popis: | Aviation and shipping currently contribute approximately 8% of total anthropogenic CO2 emissions, with growth in tourism and global trade projected to increase this contribution further. Carbon-neutral transportation is feasible with electric motors powered by rechargeable batteries, though challenging if not impossible for long-haul commercial travel, particularly air travel. A promising solution are drop-in fuels (synthetic alternatives for petroleum-derived liquid hydrocarbon fuels such as kerosene, gasoline or diesel) made from H2O and CO2 by solar-driven processes. Among the many possible approaches, the thermochemical path using concentrated solar radiation as the source of high-temperature process heat offers potentially high production rates and efficiencies and can deliver truly carbon-neutral fuels if the required CO2 is obtained directly from atmospheric air. If H2O is also co-extracted from air, feedstock sourcing and fuel production can be co-located in desert regions with high solar irradiation and limited access to water resources. While individual steps of such a scheme have been implemented, we now demonstrate operation of the entire thermochemical solar fuel production chain, from H2O and CO2 captured directly from ambient air to the synthesis of drop-in transportation fuels (e.g. methanol, kerosene), with a modular 5-kWthermal pilot-scale solar system operated under real field conditions. We further identify the R&D efforts and discuss the economic viability and policies required to bring these solar fuels to market. ISSN:0028-0836 ISSN:1476-4687 |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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