http://www.uh.edu/news-events/stories/2013/december/1216baohydrogen

As it happens in LENR. nanoparticles can concentrate the energy of photons
on a localized nanometric scale through super-lensing. Here is yet
another application of this ability.

Researchers from the University of Houston have found a catalyst that can
quickly generate hydrogen from water using sunlight, potentially creating a
clean and renewable source of energy.

Their research, published online Sunday in Nature Nanotechnology, involved
the use of cobalt oxide nanoparticles to split water into hydrogen and
oxygen.

Jiming Bao, lead author of the paper and an assistant professor in the
Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering at UH, said the research
discovered a new photocatalyst and demonstrated the potential of
nanotechnology in engineering a material’s property, although more work
remains to be done.

Bao said photocatalytic water-splitting experiments have been tried since
the 1970s, but this was the first to use cobalt oxide and the first to use
neutral water under visible light at a high energy conversion efficiency
without co-catalysts or sacrificial chemicals. The project involved
researchers from UH, along with those from Sam Houston State University,
the Chinese Academy of Sciences, Texas State University, Carl Zeiss
Microscopy LLC, and Sichuan University.

Researchers prepared the nanoparticles in two ways, using femtosecond laser
ablation and through mechanical ball milling. Despite some differences, Bao
said both worked equally well.

Different sources of light were used, ranging from a laser to white light
simulating the solar spectrum. He said he would expect the reaction to work
equally well using natural sunlight.

Once the nanoparticles are added and light applied, the water separates
into hydrogen and oxygen almost immediately, producing twice as much
hydrogen as oxygen, as expected from the 2:1 hydrogen to oxygen ratio in H2O
water molecules, Bao said.

The experiment has potential as a source of renewable fuel, but at a
solar-to-hydrogen efficiency rate of around 5 percent, the conversion rate
is still too low to be commercially viable. Bao suggested a more feasible
efficiency rate would be about 10 percent, meaning that 10 percent of the
incident solar energy will be converted to hydrogen chemical energy by the
process.

Other issues remain to be resolved, as well, including reducing costs and
extending the lifespan of cobalt oxide nanoparticles, which the researchers
found became deactivated after about an hour of reaction.

“It degrades too quickly,” said Bao, who also has appointments in materials
engineering and the Department of Chemistry.
 The work, supported by the Welch Foundation, will lead to future research,
he said, including the question of why cobalt oxide nanoparticles have such
a short lifespan, and questions involving chemical and electronic
properties of the material.
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