| $3M system
looks to cut down on high costs of energy, promises a new generation of
hydrogen-based, renewable energy
RENO,
Nev. – Northern Nevada energy consumers can be excused if they have a sense
of "sticker shock" when their power bills come due following the holiday
season. Or, that they have a feeling of powerlessness as the price of gasoline
climbs to $3 per gallon.
They wonder: will the days of the
$1 tank of gas ever return?
Thanks to research done by a University
of Nevada, Reno professor in the area of hydrogen energy generation, soaring
power bills could become a thing of the past. And, finding a power source
for your car that costs as little as $1 per gallon could also soon become
a welcome reality.
Manoranjan Misra, professor of materials
science and engineering, recently received a $3 million research grant
from the U.S. Department of Energy to continue his groundbreaking work
in various forms of renewable energy. Misra's current project focuses on
harnessing photoactive material from the sun to generate hydrogen. Hydrogen
is one of the cleanest forms of energy, and studies have shown that it
is 33 percent more efficient than liquid fuels. Northern Nevada, with its
uncommonly sunny weather – with more than 300 sunny days per year – could
become the perfect hub to generate hydrogen energy, according to Misra.
"We can utilize this great energy
resource to our advantage to produce hydrogen," Misra said. "We are uniquely
positioned in Northern Nevada, as the average energy from the sun is around
one kilowatt per square meter area. In Reno it is much higher than that.
Because it is so bright and sunny here in Reno, we have in many ways the
perfect location for photo-hydrogen generation."
Misra and his research team have
created a new hydrogen material that has more than a billion nanotubes,
which gives it excellent potential to produce hydrogen from another abundant
resource – water. Misra's small-scale hydrogen generation system, located
in the Laxalt Mineral Research Building, produces the material through
an electrochemical process from applied ultrasonic waves.
"We are currently using simulated
solar light in the lab," Misra said, "and we are finding our system to
be a good and robust way to facilitate the movement of electrons by the
incident light to produce hydrogen from water." By the end of the decade,
Misra estimates that the system could grow to a more industrial size scale,
which would allow power companies to produce hydrogen that could be used
to power automobiles or power your home. The new power source is extremely
cost-effective, Misra says.
"What do we pay now for a tank of
gas? A little less than three dollars per gallon? The equivalent for hydrogen
generation might be something more along the lines of $1 per gallon to
produce," Misra says. "Plus, hydrogen is much more friendly to the environment.
Given the weather in Northern Nevada, where on most days we have 10 to
15 percent more sunlight than in other areas of the country, the future
of this type of this energy is limitless."

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