| Turning Carbon Dioxide into Fuel – with the Sun |
| Written by Heather McKee | ||
| Monday, 14 January 2008 | ||
|
Sandia Labs’ Counter Rotating Ring Receiver Reactor Recuperator (also known as CR5, thankfully) was designed as a solar-powered hydrolyzer originally, but researchers also realized the potential of the system to convert carbon dioxide gases into energy sources. Used to produce hydrogen, oxygen, and carbon monoxide from carbon dioxide and water, the CR5 could be used in synthesizing fuels – by feeding these products to Coskata’s bacterial ethanol machine or providing the starting point for the synthesis of other fuels, from methanol to jet diesel, or even plastics. Initially, researchers hope to place the CR5 as a collector at point sources of carbon dioxide. Ultimately, they plan for the CR5 to trap carbon dioxide directly from the air. Whether syngas is created from trash or carbon dioxide, these inputs would be highly preferable to conventional raw fossil fuels. Ever heard of IGCC? Clean coal energy through gasification? Tell me again why we should mine for inputs when there is so much free trash and carbon dioxide.
Comments
(1)
Timing ..
written by ASiegel1 , January 14, 2008
Looks to be that this is perhaps 15 years off. Interesting technology but not something 'on the shelf'. The Coskata seems (press release material) to be far closer.
| ||
| < Prev | Next > |
|---|
Science, technology gadgets and...baby seals. We're in a bit of an eco-mess, but we've got the brains to lick any problem. And that's why EcoGeek.org publishes up to ten stories daily about innovations that are saving the planet.
And if that sounds interesting to you, then congratulations, you're an EcoGeek.