Monday, May 06, 2013

Report: Nanonets from BC Lab Give Rust a Boost as Agent in Clean Fuel Science


Nano-scale lattice is promising platform for water splitting's hydrogen harvest

Coating a lattice of tiny wires called Nanonets with iron oxide – known more commonly as rust – creates an economical and efficient platform for the process of water splitting, an emerging clean fuel science that harvests hydrogen from water, Boston College researchers report in the online edition of the Journal of the American Chemical Society.

Boston College Assistant Professor of Chemistry Dunwei Wang and his clean energy lab pioneered the development of Nanonets in 2008 and have since shown them to be a viable new platform for a number of energy applications by virtue of the increased surface area and improved conductivity of the nano-scale netting made from titanium disilicide, a readily available semiconductor.

See full Press Release: http://www.bc.edu/offices/pubaf/news/2011/rust_study021011.html