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China-UK study ‘shines new light’ in solar-hydrogen power quest
- Researchers say they have found a way to improve the efficiency of the process in the laboratory
- The next step is to apply it to an industrial setting, they say
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A team of scientists in China and Britain have made what they say is a breakthrough in the quest to use sunlight to produce hydrogen, which can be used as a power source or in industry.
In a paper published in the peer-reviewed journal Nature Communications last week, the scientists said they had used a new type of photocatalyst to improve the efficiency of the solar-to-hydrogen process.
“The study is a breakthrough on converting solar energy to hydrogen,” said Zhang Yumin, lead author of the study and a researcher with Yunnan University.
“The cost is very low and the experiment is easy to replicate.”
However, the technology was still in the early stage of development and much more worked needed to be done to make the leap from the laboratory to industry, they cautioned.
Scientists around the world have been working for more than half a century to use “solar fuels” such as hydrogen as a clean alternative source of power to fossil fuels.
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