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Scientists say their device can pull water from the air to create green hydrogen
AsiaOne ^ | SEPTEMBER 06, 2022 | Holly Chik

Posted on 09/12/2022 5:14:47 PM PDT by nickcarraway

An international team of scientists say they have found a new way to extract water from bone-dry air to produce hydrogen, which they call “the ultimate clean energy”. Unsplash

AsiaOne has launched EarthOne, a new section dedicated to environmental issues — because we love the planet and we believe science. Find articles like this there.

An international team of scientists say they have found a new way to extract water from bone-dry air to produce hydrogen, which they call “the ultimate clean energy”.

The researchers said the device could be used in an arid environment where relative humidity was as low as 4 per cent — meaning green hydrogen could potentially be created without using liquid water.

Average relative humidity is around 20 per cent, for example, in the Sahel desert in Africa and Uluru in the Central Australian desert.

“Moisture in the air can directly be used for hydrogen production via electrolysis, owing to its universal availability and natural inexhaustibility,” the researchers wrote in a paper published in peer-reviewed journal Nature Communications on Tuesday (Sept 6).

The team of chemical engineers — from the University of Melbourne, University of Manchester and Chinese Academy of Sciences — said there were 13 trillion tonnes of water in the air at any moment. Electrolysis is the process of using electricity to split water into oxygen and hydrogen. When the process is powered by renewable electricity, the green hydrogen is “the most promising energy carrier of the low-carbon economy”, the scientists said.

Hydrogen can also be used as a storage medium for energy that is not continuously available, such as solar, wind and tidal power, they said.

But a global geographic mismatch between renewables distribution and fresh water supply makes it difficult to produce hydrogen in places where drinking water is a priority, according to the paper.

It pointed to North Africa, West and Central Asia, Midwest Oceania and the southwest of North America as areas where there is a shortage of fresh water but potential for solar and wind power.

To overcome the problem of not having enough water to create hydrogen, the scientists designed a device that uses porous materials — like a melamine sponge — soaked in electrolytes to absorb moisture from the air. It then splits the captured liquid water into hydrogen and oxygen. That process could be powered by a solar panel, a wind turbine or other renewable generators.

The team’s prototype machine is 1 square metre and can produce 93 litres of hydrogen per hour, according to the study. The device was tested to produce hydrogen of high purity for more than 12 days in a row at 40 per cent relative humidity without any liquid water added.

Study co-author Fan Xiaolei, from the University of Manchester’s chemical engineering department, said the device had several advantages.

“A lot of places with abundant renewable energy sources have limited water supply. Instead of competing for scarce drinking water, the device collects water from the air – which can hardly be used by humans anyway — to produce hydrogen,” he said.

“The production process also makes use of excess renewable energy, which could go to waste if not stored or sent to power grids when they have reached maximum capacities.”

Fan said the development could also be significant for chemical makers that use green hydrogen as a feedstock and renewable energy to reduce their carbon footprint, giving ammonia production as an example.

Hu Guoping, a researcher with the Ganjiang Innovation Academy at the Chinese Academy of Sciences and also a co-author of the study, said hydrogen could potentially be transported to cities via gas pipelines when the device is scaled up.

“When China reduces the share of natural gas in its energy mix in the coming decades, the existing pipeline network can be used to transport hydrogen from the west to the eastern coastal cities,” he said. “At a smaller size, the device can be run in remote areas to power daily life.”

Lead author Kevin Li Gang, a senior lecturer at the University of Melbourne’s chemical engineering department, said the team planned to enlarge the device and explore other applications for it.

Li said it would be expanded to 10 square metres in the third quarter next year so it could produce enough hydrogen power in a day for one family.

He estimated that if it were scaled up to the size of a tennis court powered by solar energy, the device would be able to produce enough hydrogen to fuel 400 cars a year.

“We expect the product to be ready for market launch by the end of 2025 at the size of 1,000 square metres and operating in deserts, cold regions and places with storms,” Li said.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Science; Weird Stuff
KEYWORDS: doublystupid; hydrogen; hydrogeneconomy; science
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1 posted on 09/12/2022 5:14:47 PM PDT by nickcarraway
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To: nickcarraway

Electrolysis.

Hmmm...

Why didn’t somebody think of that before?


2 posted on 09/12/2022 5:23:25 PM PDT by adorno
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To: nickcarraway
“...the existing [natural gas] pipeline network can be used to transport hydrogen from the west to the eastern coastal cities” ---Hu Guoping, a researcher with the Ganjiang Innovation Academy at the Chinese Academy of Sciences

Being an academic, it is likely that Mr. Hu has never heard of hydrogen embrittlement. You really don't want your hydrogen pipeline getting brittle and going KA-BLOOEY!

3 posted on 09/12/2022 5:25:16 PM PDT by ProtectOurFreedom (“I used to be nothing but a Deplorable Clinger, but I've been promoted to Brigadier Ultra-MAGA”)
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To: adorno

“Why didn’t somebody think of that before?”

The have.


4 posted on 09/12/2022 5:26:32 PM PDT by TexasGator ( )
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To: nickcarraway

Related:

Scientists use garden plants to make hydrogen – the world’s ‘most promising’ renewable fuel

https://www.joh.cam.ac.uk/scientists-use-garden-plants-make-hydrogen-worlds-most-promising-renewable-fuel


5 posted on 09/12/2022 5:27:28 PM PDT by Jyotishi (Seeking the truth, a fact at a time.)
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Perhaps they can create ginormous pit mines everywhere to mine enough materials to make enough solar cells to cover thousands of square miles to super inefficiently create hydrogen by electrolysis. Sounds Wiley Coyote level of genius


6 posted on 09/12/2022 5:31:17 PM PDT by dsrtsage ( Complexity is just simple lacking imagination)
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To: ProtectOurFreedom
"You really don't want your hydrogen pipeline getting brittle and going KA-BLOOEY!

Hydrogen pipelines


7 posted on 09/12/2022 5:32:17 PM PDT by TexasGator ( )
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To: ProtectOurFreedom

I understand there are several engineering problems to be solved, and there has to date been no successful demonstration project to harvest “green hydrogen” at any kind of scale. If they can do it, then great. Let’s see it in action.


8 posted on 09/12/2022 5:34:21 PM PDT by hinckley buzzard ( Resist the narrative.6.)
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To: nickcarraway

The take-home message from this article:

Even engineering programs are failing their students these days.


9 posted on 09/12/2022 5:34:32 PM PDT by cockroach_magoo (“Sure we’ll have Fascism here, but it will come as an anti-Fascism movement.”  - Huey Long)
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To: TexasGator

You just can’t repurposed NG pipelines to carry H.


10 posted on 09/12/2022 5:36:40 PM PDT by ProtectOurFreedom (“I used to be nothing but a Deplorable Clinger, but I've been promoted to Brigadier Ultra-MAGA”)
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To: ProtectOurFreedom

“Being an academic, it is likely that Mr. Hu has never heard of hydrogen embrittlement. You really don’t want your hydrogen pipeline getting brittle and going KA-BLOOEY!”


Gaseous hydrogen can be transported through pipelines much the way natural gas is today. Approximately 1,600 miles of hydrogen pipelines are currently operating in the United States.

https://www.energy.gov/eere/fuelcells/hydrogen-pipelines


11 posted on 09/12/2022 5:37:07 PM PDT by TexasGator ( )
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To: nickcarraway

“An international team of scientists say they have found a new way to extract water from bone-dry air to produce hydrogen”

wouldn’t it be more efficient to just obtain the water from a well, pond, lake, stream, river or ocean?


12 posted on 09/12/2022 5:39:23 PM PDT by catnipman (In a post-covid world, ALL "science" is now political science: stolen elections have consequences)
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To: hinckley buzzard

“I understand there are several engineering problems to be solved, and there has to date been no successful demonstration project to harvest “green hydrogen” at any kind of scale. If they can do it, then great. Let’s see it in action.”

———Not a demonstration——————

https://www.azocleantech.com/article.aspx?ArticleID=1115#:~:text=The%20hydro%20power%20plant%20generates%20renewable%20electricity%20that,hydrogen%20will%20be%20produced%20by%20the%20200-kW%20facility.


13 posted on 09/12/2022 5:40:15 PM PDT by TexasGator ( )
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To: catnipman
"wouldn’t it be more efficient to just obtain the water from a well, pond, lake, stream, river or ocean?"


14 posted on 09/12/2022 5:42:09 PM PDT by TexasGator ( )
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To: adorno

I was just gonn’a say . . . my 7th grade science teacher showed us how it is done ... um ... 1959 or so


15 posted on 09/12/2022 5:47:18 PM PDT by knarf (I say things that are true . . . I have no proof, but they're true.)
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To: nickcarraway

All they need is few tons of “pixie dust”...


16 posted on 09/12/2022 5:48:35 PM PDT by pfony1 ( All Democrats lie.)
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To: TexasGator

If you are going to build a system that needs a lot of water and the resulting product will be transported hundreds of miles to be used, why not start out where there is lots of water (an ocean) and a place where there are lots of pipelines (a port). hey, lets build one near an ocean port and skip the part about sucking water from the air. Naaaaa...cant get any money to study THAT. Wait!! Doesn’t it take a lot of energy to crack water into hydrogen and oxygen? Solve that and watch, oxygen will magically become a greenhouse gas and be BAD.


17 posted on 09/12/2022 5:52:54 PM PDT by calljack (Sometimes your worst nightmare is just a start.)
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To: ProtectOurFreedom

Another problem that I can think of is that hydrogen molecules are so tiny that they can escape from nearly anything.


18 posted on 09/12/2022 5:54:49 PM PDT by Tolerance Sucks Rocks (FBI out of Florida!)
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To: nickcarraway

93 liters of hydrogen....
Ok, at what pressure?


19 posted on 09/12/2022 5:55:01 PM PDT by I want the USA back (Biden has gone full nazi. No surprise. He told us on Sept 1, during his 20 minute hate speech.)
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To: catnipman

Or from a more humid area?


20 posted on 09/12/2022 5:58:19 PM PDT by mfish13 (Elections have Consequences.)
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