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Basic Research Needs for Solar Energy Utilization - Office of ...

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BASIC RESEARCH CHALLENGES FOR SOLAR FUELS<br />

Because <strong>of</strong> the day/night variation <strong>of</strong> the solar resource, the practical use <strong>of</strong> solar energy faces<br />

two overarching technological challenges: economically converting sunlight into useful energy,<br />

and storing and dispatching that converted energy to end users in an economical, convenient<br />

<strong>for</strong>m. To provide base load power, solar electricity and any other solar energy conversion system<br />

will require a tightly integrated storage and distribution technology to provide energy to end<br />

users in accord with demand. Additionally, there must be a means to cost-effectively convert this<br />

energy into <strong>for</strong>ms useful <strong>for</strong> transportation, residential, and industrial applications. Because these<br />

sectors currently use chemical fuels as their primary energy feedstock, one <strong>of</strong> the following three<br />

options must occur: (1) solar electricity must be converted into chemical fuels that could be used<br />

in the existing distribution and end-use infrastructure; (2) the distribution and end-use<br />

infrastructure must be converted to one that allows widespread, direct use <strong>of</strong> electricity, which<br />

also must be stored until use; or (3) solar energy must be directly converted into useful chemical<br />

fuels. Put simply, without cost-effective global transmission, storage, and/or fuel <strong>for</strong>mation, solar<br />

electricity can only be a (large) niche market serving as a supplement <strong>for</strong> other primary sources<br />

<strong>of</strong> energy.<br />

Conversion <strong>of</strong> electricity into chemical fuels, through electrolysis <strong>of</strong> water to produce H2 and O2,<br />

is an existing technology. However, it is a very expensive method <strong>of</strong> making H2 (as discussed<br />

below), and the catalysts that are used in current electrolyzers cannot readily scale to the levels<br />

that would be needed to support a TW-level implementation <strong>of</strong> solar electricity use in<br />

H2 production. Direct production <strong>of</strong> fuels from sunlight is advantageous because it inherently<br />

provides a method <strong>for</strong> extracting energy during the night and <strong>for</strong> dispatching and distributing<br />

energy cost effectively in the existing infrastructure <strong>for</strong> use in the residential, industrial, and<br />

transportation sectors. The ability to use sunlight to produce CH4 or H2 from abundant, non-toxic<br />

resources such as CO2 and water, respectively, would revolutionize the economical,<br />

environmentally sound production <strong>of</strong> fuels.<br />

Photosynthetic solar energy conversion has produced the vast majority <strong>of</strong> the energy that fuels<br />

human society and sustains life on Earth. This global-scale, time-tested energy conversion and<br />

storage process produces all current biomass and, over geologic time, has produced all the fossil<br />

fuels available today. The drawback is that, with current plant types, a large-scale<br />

implementation <strong>of</strong> biomass as a primary energy source would require very large areas <strong>of</strong> land to<br />

make a material contribution to meeting current energy demands. Using the best-known plant <strong>for</strong><br />

energy production, switchgrass, as an example, production <strong>of</strong> 10 TW <strong>of</strong> average power would<br />

require covering 10% <strong>of</strong> the land on Earth (i.e., essentially all <strong>of</strong> the cultivable land on Earth that<br />

is not currently used <strong>for</strong> agriculture) would have to be covered with biomass farms. Such a large<br />

deployment would also clearly stress our ability to provide fresh water to grow such crops;<br />

would constrain land use on a global scale; and would impose serious infrastructural constraints<br />

to effectively and constantly manage, harvest, and optimally exploit all <strong>of</strong> the crops over such a<br />

large land area. Hence, practical constraints dictate that (1) the efficiency <strong>of</strong> photosynthesis be<br />

increased so that less land area (likely by a factor <strong>of</strong> 5–10) is required and/or (2) that artificial<br />

photosynthetic systems be developed that either borrow components from natural systems or are<br />

inspired by the natural system’s components to produce useful chemical fuels directly from<br />

sunlight with higher efficiencies than the natural system and with an acceptably low cost.<br />

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