From lemons to lemonade: Reaction uses carbon dioxide to make carbon-based semiconductor
(麻豆淫院) -- A materials scientist at Michigan Technological University has discovered a chemical reaction that not only eats up the greenhouse gas carbon dioxide, it also creates something useful. And, by the way, it releases energy.
Making carbon-based products from CO2聽is nothing new, but carbon dioxide molecules are so stable that those reactions usually take up a lot of energy. If that energy were to come from fossil fuels, over time the chemical reactions would ultimately result in more carbon dioxide entering the atmosphere鈥攄efeating the purpose of a process that could otherwise help mitigate climate change.
Professor Yun Hang Hu鈥檚 research team developed a heat-releasing reaction between carbon dioxide and Li3N that forms two chemicals: amorphous carbon nitride (C3N4), a semiconductor; and lithium cyanamide (Li2CN2), a precursor to fertilizers.
鈥淭he reaction converts CO2聽to a solid material,鈥 said Hu. 鈥淭hat would be good even if it weren鈥檛 useful, but it is.鈥
And how much energy does it release? Plenty. Hu鈥檚 team added carbon dioxide to less than a gram of Li3N at 330 degrees Celsius, and the surrounding temperature jumped almost immediately to about 1,000 degrees Celsius, or 1,832 degrees Fahrenheit, about the temperature of lava exiting a volcano.
Hu鈥檚 work is funded by the National Science Foundation and detailed in the article聽聽authored by Hu and graduate student Yan Huo and published in the Journal of 麻豆淫院ical Chemistry.
Provided by Michigan Technological University