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| Funder | European Commission |
|---|---|
| Recipient Organization | University College Cork - National University of Ireland, Cork |
| Country | Ireland |
| Start Date | Nov 01, 2022 |
| End Date | Feb 28, 2026 |
| Duration | 1,215 days |
| Number of Grantees | 7 |
| Roles | Participant; Coordinator |
| Data Source | European Commission |
| Grant ID | 101084261 |
The FreeHydroCells project aims to create a new photoelectrochemical system capable of clean, efficient solar-to-chemical energy conversion, with hydrogen gas storing the chemical energy.
The system would mimic the solar-energy absorption potential of a leaf by arraying cascades of nanometre thick semiconducting materials as buried pn-junctions that, when submerged in water and exposed to sunlight, are capable of freestanding photoelectrochemical water splitting.
A number of technological challenges restrict the cost-effective efficiency of clean, green, solar-to-chemical hydrogen, state-of-the-art systems, making it commercially unattractive, and severely limiting hydrogens role in decarbonisation.
However, the FreeHydroCells project proposes to leverage a number of advancements in thin film materials, devices, and processes to make similar breakthroughs in photoelectrochemical band-engineering for interconnected bands, defect minimisation, thin film thickness uniformity continuity to minimise drift-dominated transit times, carrier doping for high conductivity, carrier type selectivity and, importantly, preventing significant recombination of light-generated carriers by ensuring drift transport under multiple in-built electric fields.
These breakthroughs would transform the transfer efficiency of solar-to-chemical energy via the carefully aligned redox potential and propel the photoelectrochemical water splitting reactions to morph solar energy into hydrogen bonds.
The new materials system could be cost-effectively realised through modified delivery techniques of atomic layer deposition and chemical vapour deposition in manufacturing-compatible, large-area capable, equipment that is now common in commercial chip and solar cell processing technologies.
FreeHydroCells multidisciplinary expertise is key to making this substantial science-to-technology leap: to verify a paradigm proof-of-concept for a self-driven system suitable for up-scaling and commercialisation.
Bards Acoustic Science Labs; Rheinisch-Westfaelische Technische Hochschule Aachen; Commissariat A L Energie Atomique Et Aux Energies Alternatives; Gesellschaft Fur Angewandte Mikro Und Optoelektronik Mit Beschrankterhaftung Amo Gmbh; Consiglio Nazionale Delle Ricerche; Ucc Academy Designated Activity Company; University College Cork - National University of Ireland, Cork
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