News & Events Press ReleasePitt Professor Designs Less-Risky Reactor for Clean, Safe EnergyPITTSBURGH—Reactors that burn hydrogen or natural gas to generate energy can be dirty and dangerous. The mix of air with hydrogen or natural gas can explode easily if composition and temperature are not carefully controlled. And reactors often produce polluting byproducts. Now, University of Pittsburgh researcher Goetz Veser has created a safer alternative—microreactors that won’t explode, no matter what the gas composition or how hot they get, and that can keep undesirable pollutants, like nitrogen oxides (NOx), from forming. His results could be used to design processes for safe, clean energy production and hydrogen storage. Veser, who is assistant professor of chemical engineering in Pitt’s School of Engineering, discussed his findings Sept. 12 during a presentation at the 232nd American Chemical Society National Meeting in San Francisco, Calif. Reactor explosions can happen either when the reaction gets too hot or when atoms called “free radicals” break away and start to split the bonds of other molecules. In both cases, the reaction speeds up and the temperature increases until—kaboom! But Veser’s microreactors are actually “inherently safe,” he says. “Even if the temperature goes completely through the roof, based on the kinetics of the system, explosions cannot happen.”
But nothing happened—other than the controlled burning of hydrogen. The walls did indeed adsorb any pesky radicals floating around, keeping the reaction running smoothly. Veser has since extended the technology to burning methane; he has found that not only can the walls stave off explosions, they also can steer the course of the reaction. For example, some NOx is formed by the heat and some by radicals. Veser found that at a particular size, the microreactor walls adsorb the radicals that cause NOx, while letting the reaction go ahead. “This is a completely different way of approaching a clean combustion technology,” he says. Veser’s research is supported by the National Science Foundation through a CAREER Award. Pitt’s Petersen Institute of NanoScience and Engineering is an integrated, multidisciplinary organization that brings coherence to the University’s research efforts and resources in the fields of nanoscale science and engineering. For more information, visit www.nano.pitt.edu. |
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