Bill Gates Visits Caltech Solar Fuel Laboratory
Last week, Bill Gates published a blog post on his visit to Caltech Professor Nate Lewis’s research laboratory on solar fuels. Solar fuels leverage similar natural processes such as photosynthesis in plants to convert sunlight into liquid fuel. Solar fuels have the opportunity to solve several of the shortfalls of renewable technologies: solar panels only generate power when the sun shines and transportation infrastructure energy applications require very high energy densities. Battery storage technology has improved, but one ton of gasoline has the energy density equivalent of 60 tons of batteries, so battery technology is not sufficient for transportation applications.
Solar Fuel Progress
Lewis has been pursuing research in solar energy for over 40 years and is trying to make solar fuels more commercially viable. He uses the analogy of the invention of the airplane — early airplanes were inspired by birds and similarly solar fuels will apply concepts from photosynthesis, but make them much better.
A critical process in solar fuels is using light to separate hydrogen and oxygen in water and then combine the hydrogen with carbon dioxide to create fuels. The current materials used to combine the hydrogen and carbon dioxide are prohibitively expensive (platinum), so a main focus of Lewis’s team is finding alternative materials. An initial concept from the Caltech team is an artificial turf that would hold water in plastic and collect sunlight to start the process mentioned above (aided by a catalyst) and the solar fuels could be collected underneath and transported to a solar fuel refinery. Caltech is not the only team pursuing research in solar fuels. Daniel Nocera at Harvard Devens Gust at the University of Arizona are pursuing similar research.
Energy Miracles
Bill Gates recently launched Breakthrough Ventures, a $1 billion fund to invest in scientific discoveries that have the potential to deliver cheap and reliable clean energy to the world. Gates believes solar fuels has the potential to be an “energy miracle,” as it would solve several of the current challenges to renewable energy adoption and dramatic greenhouse gas emission reductions.
Gates has long been a proponent of the government funding basic scientific research that can lead to these discoveries and eventually be developed commercially. As an example, solar panels were invented over 60 years ago, but only in the last decade really started to take off, particularly in solar states such as California and New York. Solar fuels will likely not be commercially viable in the near future, but will hopefully develop at a faster rate than solar panels. Lewis noted that experiments in his team’s research lab that used to take a year to conduct are now completed within a day.
The full blog post on Gate’s Notes can be viewed here.
This article was originally published by Sunvago and was republished with permission.