Green Power is the future

Solar power, wind power, geothermal energy, hydro generation, bio-fuel, and tidal power are all examples of Green Power, the future of energy for everyone on Earth. Whether you're interested in renewable energy for your home or business, or want to keep up on the latest trends of sustainability throughout the world, here's a resource you want to visit regularly.

Artificial leaf mimics nature, breaks down water into hydrogen and oxygen for use in fuel cells

The green science world is abuzz about a new inventions that's being heralded as the "holy grail" of environmental sciences.  It's an artificial leaf that can create hydrogen and oxygen gases from water, and those gases can be used to create enough electricity to power a home!


From Clean Technica:

Yet another new breakthrough in low cost solar energy just made its debut, and this one is a doozy: a solar cell the size of a typical leaf, that actually creates energy the same way a leaf does: with photosynthesis. No, for real. You just park it in a bucket of water and it generates enough electricity to power household devices… eventually (more on that below). The announcement was made by the lead researcher on the MIT-based project, Dr. Daniel Nocera, who said, “A practical artificial leaf has been one of the Holy Grails of science for decades.”

Solar Power from an Artificial Leaf

The new solar cell is about about the size of a poker card. It doesn’t produce usable electricity directly, like a photovoltaic cell does. Instead, it is used to split water molecules into hydrogen and oxygen gasses. These are stored in a fuel cell, which then produces the electricity for household use. The idea is to have the combination of solar “leaf” and fuel cell as an affordable onsite renewable energy appliance that practically anyone could afford, just like a furnace, hot water heater or emergency generator. One sticking point in the research was to find a low-cost catalyst to set off the reaction, and Nocera’s team came up with several alternatives made of nickel and cobalt.

Photosynthesis and Renewable Energy

Though Nocera is apparently the first to come up with a commercially viable, low-cost renewable energy system based on photosynthesis, other researchers are also following the trail. At the Department of Energy’s Oak Ridge laboratory, long-running research into a light-harvesting protein from spinach has resulted in a similar hydrogen-producing process.

Affordable Energy, Thank You Federal Government

With oil prices spiking up for the umpteenth time in the past few years, consumers are eager for a solution, and renewable energy is beginning to provide it. When Nocera’s solar leaf is ready for commercial production, we can all pat ourselves on the back: some of our tax dollars have supported his research, through the Department of Energy’s ARPA-E transformational energy program.

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