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Sandia’s
Sunshine To Petrol Project Seeks Fuel From Thin Air
Thursday, December 6, 2007
Team to
chemically transform carbon dioxide into carbon-neutral liquid
fuels
Sandia
researcher Rich Diver assembles a prototype device intended
to chemically reenergize carbon dioxide into carbon
monoxide, which ultimately could become the building block
to synthesize a liquid combustible fuel.
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Sandia
researcher Rich Diver checks out the solar furnace which
will be the initial source of concentrated solar heat for
the CR5 prototype. Eventually parabolic dishes will provide
the thermal energy.
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Credit:
Photo's by Randy Montoya
Using concentrated solar
energy to reverse combustion, a research team from Sandia
National Laboratories is building a prototype device intended to
chemically “reenergize” carbon dioxide into carbon
monoxide using concentrated solar power. The carbon monoxide
could then be used to make hydrogen or serve as a building block
to synthesize a liquid combustible fuel, such as methanol or even
gasoline, diesel and jet fuel.
The prototype device, called
the Counter Rotating Ring Receiver Reactor Recuperator (CR5, for
short), will break a carbon-oxygen bond in the carbon dioxide to
form carbon monoxide and oxygen in two distinct steps. It is a
major piece of an approach to converting carbon dioxide into fuel
from sunlight.
The Sandia research team calls
this approach “Sunshine to Petrol” (S2P). “Liquid
Solar Fuel” is the end product — the methanol,
gasoline, or other liquid fuel made from water and the carbon
monoxide produced using solar energy.
Sandia is a National Nuclear
Security Administration (NNSA) laboratory.
CR5 inventor Rich Diver says
the original idea for the device was to break down water into
hydrogen and oxygen. The hydrogen could then fuel a potential
hydrogen economy.
The Sandia researchers came up
with the idea to use the CR5 to break down carbon dioxide, just
as it would water. Over the past year they have shown proof of
concept and are completing a prototype device that will use
concentrated solar energy to reenergize carbon dioxide or water,
the products of combustion. This will form carbon monoxide,
hydrogen, and oxygen, which ultimately could be used to
synthesize liquid fuels in an integrated S2P system.
Coresearchers on the project
are Jim E. Miller and Nathan Siegel. Project champion is Ellen B.
Stechel, manager of Sandia’s Fuels and Energy Transitions
Department.
Stechel says that researchers
have known for a long time that theoretically it might be
possible to recycle carbon dioxide, but many thought it could not
be made practical, either technically or economically.
“Hence, it has not been
pursued with much vigor,” she says. “Not only did we
think it was possible, the team has developed a prototype that
they fully anticipate will successfully break down carbon dioxide
in a clever and viable two-step process.”
Stechel notes that one driver
for the invention is the need to reduce greenhouse gases.
“This invention, though
probably a good 15 to 20 years away from being on the market,
holds a real promise of being able to reduce carbon dioxide
emissions while preserving options to keep using fuels we know
and love,” she says. “Recycling carbon dioxide into
fuels provides an attractive alternative to burying it.”
Providing funding for Sunshine
to Petrol is Sandia’s internal Laboratory Directed Research
and Development (LDRD) program. The research has also attracted
interest and some funding from DoD/DARPA (Defense Advanced
Research Projects Agency).
“What’s exciting
about this invention is that it will result in fossil fuels being
used at least twice, meaning less carbon dioxide being put into
the atmosphere and a reduction of the rate that fossil fuels are
pulled out of the ground,” Diver says.
As an example, he says, coal
would be burned at a clean coal power plant. The carbon dioxide
from the burning of the coal would be captured and reduced to
carbon monoxide in the CR5. The carbon monoxide would then be the
starting point of making gasoline, jet fuel, methanol, or almost
any type of liquid fuel.
The prospect of a liquid fuel
is significant because it fits in with the current gasoline and
oil infrastructure. After the synthesized fuel is made from the
carbon monoxide, it could be transported through a pipeline or
put in a truck and hauled to a gas station, just like gasoline
refined from petroleum is now. Plus it would work in ordinary
gasoline and diesel engine vehicles.
Miller says that while the
first step would be to capture the carbon dioxide from sources
where it is concentrated — e.g., power plants, smokestacks,
and breweries — the ultimate goal would be to snatch it out
of the air. A S2P system that includes atmospheric carbon dioxide
capture could produce carbon-neutral liquid fuels.
“Our overall objective
with this prototype is to demonstrate the practicality of the CR5
concept and to determine how test results from small-scale
testing can be expanded to work in real devices,” Miller
says. “The design is conservative compared to what might
eventually be developed.”
Diver says the prototype should
be completed by early next year. He hand-built the precision
device in a shop at Sandia’s National Solar Thermal Test
Facility and is now waiting on a few parts to finalize it.
Initial tests will break down water into hydrogen and oxygen.
That will be followed by tests that similarly break down carbon
dioxide to carbon monoxide and oxygen.
Besides having a nearly
completed prototype, the research team has already proven that
the chemistry works repeatedly through multiple cycles without
losing performance and on a short enough cycle time for a
practical device.
“We just now have to do
it all in one continuous working device,” Siegel says.
Source:
Sandia National Laboratories

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