International Research Excellence Citation Awards
How to make jet fuel from sunlight, air and water
vapor
Solar
kerosene could one day provide aviation with a carbon-neutral fuel
An array of 169 reflectors focus sunlight on a
solar reactor at the top of this tower. The light reacts with carbon dioxide
and water vapor, forming a mixture that can be turned into kerosene and diesel
fuel.
IMDEA ENERGY
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Jet
fuel can now be siphoned from the air.
Or
at least that’s the case in Móstoles, Spain, where researchers demonstrated
that an outdoor system could produce kerosene,
used as jet fuel, with three simple ingredients: sunlight, carbon dioxide and
water vapor. Solar kerosene could replace petroleum-derived jet fuel in
aviation and help stabilize greenhouse gas emissions, the researchers report in
the July 20 Joule.
Burning
solar-derived kerosene releases carbon dioxide, but only as much as is used to
make it, says Aldo Steinfeld, an engineer at ETH Zurich. “That makes the fuel
carbon neutral, especially if we use carbon dioxide captured directly from the
air.”
Kerosene is the fuel of choice for
aviation, a sector responsible for around 5 percent of human-caused greenhouse
gas emissions. Finding sustainable alternatives has proven difficult,
especially for long-distance aviation, because kerosene is packed with so much
energy, says chemical physicist Ellen Stechel of Arizona State University in
Tempe who was not involved in the study.
Within
the solar reactor, porous ceria (shown) gets heated by sunlight and reacts with
carbon dioxide and water vapor to produce syngas, a mixture of hydrogen gas and
carbon monoxide.ETH
ZURICH
When heated with solar radiation, the
ceria reacts with carbon dioxide and water vapor in the reactor to produce
syngas — a mixture of hydrogen gas and carbon monoxide. The syngas is then
piped to the tower’s base where a machine converts it into kerosene and other
hydrocarbons.
Over nine days of operation, the
researchers found that the tower converted about 4 percent of the used solar
energy into roughly 5,191 liters of syngas, which was used to synthesize both
kerosene and diesel. This proof-of-principle setup produced about a liter of
kerosene a day, Steinfeld says.
“It’s
a major milestone,” Stechel says, though the efficiency needs to be improved
for the technology to be useful to industry. For context, a Boeing 747
passenger jet burns around 19,000 liters of fuel during takeoff and the ascent
to cruising altitude. Recovering heat unused by the system and improving the
ceria’s heat absorption could boost the tower’s efficiency to more than 20
percent, making it economically practical, the researchers say.
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