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Judi Lynn

(160,483 posts)
Mon Jul 30, 2018, 01:33 AM Jul 2018

Artificial leaves convert sunlight into fuel at a rate that could efficiently power remote locations

Besting Nature
Artificial leaves convert sunlight into fuel at a rate that could efficiently power remote locations.

This article was produced for Mega by Scientific American Custom Media, a division separate from the magazine's board of editors.

July 24, 2018|Photo Credit: Simon Gakhar/Getty Images
After slipping a thumb-size silicon microprocessor into a small beaker filled with water, Daniel Nocera turns on a light. Instantly, bubbles stream from the chip.

Turning off the light stops the bubbles. It’s a simple demonstration, but one that could promise power for the millions who have least access to it—those in under-developed countries and remote locations.

The chip is an artificial leaf. Nocera—Harvard University’s Patterson Rockwood Professor of Energy—has developed it to mimic photosynthesis, nature’s chemical process that turns sunlight into stored energy.

But more than just copying nature, Nocera’s technology outdoes it. While the most efficient plants can convert about 1 per cent of sunlight into energy, manmade versions could produce at least 10 times better results—though it’s early days yet.

More:
https://www.scientificamerican.com/custom-media/pictet/besting-nature/?mvt=i&mvn=e1c5c7866dde44c8b114a11657ef54c7&mvp=NA-SCIEAMERLIVE-11237933&mvl=HomePopular

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Artificial leaves convert sunlight into fuel at a rate that could efficiently power remote locations (Original Post) Judi Lynn Jul 2018 OP
Very cool. Except we won't have access to anything like this PatrickforO Jul 2018 #1
Message auto-removed Name removed Jul 2018 #2

PatrickforO

(14,561 posts)
1. Very cool. Except we won't have access to anything like this
Mon Jul 30, 2018, 03:32 AM
Jul 2018

until some utility company figures out how to charge us ongoing for the energy.

Response to PatrickforO (Reply #1)

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