What is this? From this page you can use the Social Web links to save Medieval Churches: Solar-Powered Nanotech Pioneers to a social bookmarking site, or the E-mail form to send a link via e-mail.

Social Web

E-mail

E-mail It
August 22, 2008

Medieval Churches: Solar-Powered Nanotech Pioneers

Posted in:

Posted in air quality

stained glass

As I recently discussed, sometimes we need to look to the past for solutions to our current problems. Queensland University professor Zhu Huai Yong has done just that, noting that painting glass windows with gold particles can purify the air.

Zhu came across this realization after studying medieval painted church windows, which were often decorated using glass colored with gold nanoparticles.

Though people likely did not realize it at the time the churches were built, the sun-energized nanoparticles destroy air-borne pollutants, as sunlight creates an electromagnetic field that resonates with the gold particles’ oscillations.

While CO2 is a byproduct of the filtering process, it only occurs in small amounts and is not as harmful as volatile organic compounds that the nanoparticles destroy.

Zhu’s discovery isn’t just trivia fodder—the researcher believes that it could be applied to produce specialty chemicals at room temperature that are both cost-effective (despite the high price of gold) and have minimal environmental impact.

More Posts:

Tweet This Post


Return to: Medieval Churches: Solar-Powered Nanotech Pioneers