“Artificial Leaf” To Produce Green Hydrogen
An “artificial leaf” mimics the natural process of photosynthesis to produce green hydrogen from sunlight and water.
An “artificial leaf” mimics the natural process of photosynthesis to produce green hydrogen from sunlight and water.
Deploying solar energy to mimic photosynthesis is harder than it looks, but a team from Berkeley Lab has cracked part of the “artificial leaf” code.
Perovskite is working its magic on the green hydrogen field and breathing new life into the artificial leaf concept for popping clean H2 out of water.
A new wave energy device that resembles a jellyfish achieves sustainability trifecta: carbon capture, clean power and renewable formic acid.
Solar fuel is the next wave of the renewable energy revolution, once they figure out how to scale a tiny little tile into a commercial scale operation.
Solar cell researchers are marching the world onward to the low carbon economy of the future, Clean Power Plan or no Clean Power Plan.
The Obama Administration is throwing $75 million at another one of those silly-sounding research projects, artificial photosynthesis.
Harvard scientists have invented a new way to make rubbing alcohol with a “bionic leaf,” which is a bigger deal than you might think.
In the latest solar cell breakthrough, a new “artificial leaf”mimics the electron transfer of photosynthesis, at a much faster rate than observed in nature.
Researchers from Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory are developing a new bionic leaf that can convert energy from sunlight into an energy-dense fuel, imitating the photosynthetic process of plants. We’ve covered the artificial leaf concept before but aside from using a cool new name (bionic leaf sounds much cooler than artificial … [continued]