1. Life cycle assessment of earth-abundant photocatalysts for enhanced photocatalytic hydrogen production.
- Author
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Maurya, Jayranjan, Gemechu, Eskinder, and Kumar, Amit
- Subjects
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PRODUCT life cycle assessment , *NITRIDES , *HYDROGEN production , *STEAM reforming , *GREENHOUSE gases , *CARBON dioxide - Abstract
Hydrogen (H 2) can play a critical role in global greenhouse gas (GHG) mitigation. Photocatalytic water splitting using solar radiation is a promising H 2 technology. Titanium dioxide (TiO 2) and carbon nitride (g–C 3 N 4)–based photocatalysts are the most widely used photocatalytic materials because of their activity and abundance. Several attempts have been made to improve the photocatalytic performance of these materials in terms of their activity level, life span, response to visible radiation, and stability. However, the environmental impacts of these modifications are often not included in existing studies. This research, therefore, develops a cradle-to-grave life cycle assessment (LCA) framework to evaluate and compare the GHG footprints of four alternative pathways: TiO 2 nanorods and fluorine-doped carbon nitride quantum dots embedded with TiO 2 (CNF: TNR/TiO 2), g-C 3 N 4 , and g-C 3 N 4 /BiOI composite. Unlike most studies that focus only on certain stages such as laboratory-scale photocatalytic fabrication, this study includes utility-scale cell production, assembly, operation, and end of life to give a more accurate and precise environmental performance estimation. The results show that g-C 3 N 4 /BiOI has the lowest GHG footprint (0.38 kg CO 2 eq per kg of H 2) and CNF: TNR/TiO 2 has the lowest energy payback time (0.4 years). In every pathway, energy use in material extraction processes makes up the largest GHG contribution, between 83% and 89%. Sensitivity and uncertainty analyses were conducted under the impact of various input parameters on the life cycle GHG emissions of hydrogen production. Photocatalytic water splitting is highly feasible for adaptation as a mainstream hydrogen production pathway in the future. • LCA of H 2 production via photocatalytic water splitting is conducted. • GHG emissions range from 0.33 to 1.15 kg of CO 2 eq per kg of H 2 produced. • Material extraction has the largest GHG emissions; 56–67% of total emissions. • System is scaled up to produce 5 tonnes of H 2 per day. • H 2 produced has 95% less GHG emissions than steam methane reforming. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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