Advanced Bio-Photovoltaic Devices for Solar Energy Conversion

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Title
Advanced Bio-Photovoltaic Devices for Solar Energy Conversion

CoPED ID
93379b6e-68ed-4130-9c81-acb6a73a78bb

Status
Closed

Funders

Value
£697,640

Start Date
Sept. 30, 2008

End Date
March 30, 2013

Description

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Rising atmospheric carbon dioxide levels, and concerns over energy security, mean that there is increasing interest in developing renewable energy technologies. Solar technologies are deemed to be particularly attractive, since over 100 000 TW of solar energy falls on the Earth every year. The human population currently use 10 TW of energy per annum, and by 2050, it is predicted that our energy demand will double to 20 TW per annum. It is therefore theoretically feasible that solar technologies could provide a significant proportion of our future energy requirement. However, harvesting a large proportion of this solar energy, in a cheap, efficient manner, poses many difficult technical challenges. At present, silicon based solar PV cells are the method of choice, but these devices tend to be very expensive to manufacture, since they contain highly purified, semi-conductive materials. In this application we propose to harness the photochemical reactions associated with photosynthesis, a fundamental biological process, to convert sunlight into a usable form of energy by means of a biological photovoltaic panel. Using a multidisciplinary consortium of groups based in Plant Science, Biochemistry, Genetics, Engineering and Chemistry we intend to develop, test and optimise biological photovoltaics for the production of hydrogen and/or electricity. A large amount of work has already been carried out in the field of biological hydrogen production, but so far it has proved difficult to overcome the major technical hurdle that limits the commercialisation of this technology, namely that the oxygen produced during photosynthesis inhibits the production of hydrogen from the hydrogenase enzyme in vivo. Although there has been some interest in fabricating artificial devices with purified protein complexes to overcome this problem, the instability of these proteins has prevented economic exploitation. In this application, we propose to separate the processes of oxygen evolution and hydrogen production in a semi-biological photovoltaic device using intact photosynthetic cells, in which protein complexes are intrinsically more stable, and which furthermore have mechanisms for self-repair. The device will be composed of two chambers, or half-cells, with oxygen evolution confined to one chamber and hydrogen production to the other. In addition, the approach can be used to produce a DC electrical current, in a manner analogous to standard silicon based photovoltaic panels.

University of Bath LEAD_ORG
BBSRC COFUND_ORG

Laurence Peter PI_PER
Petra Cameron COI_PER

Subjects by relevance
  1. Solar energy
  2. Hydrogen
  3. Renewable energy sources
  4. Energy production (process industry)
  5. Carbon dioxide
  6. Solar cells
  7. Photosynthesis
  8. Energy
  9. Optimisation
  10. Proteins
  11. Energy technology
  12. Light (electromagnetic radiation)

Extracted key phrases
  1. Solar Energy Conversion
  2. Advanced Bio
  3. Atmospheric carbon dioxide level
  4. Biological photovoltaic device
  5. Photovoltaic Devices
  6. Renewable energy technology
  7. Solar energy
  8. Biological hydrogen production
  9. Photovoltaic panel
  10. Energy security
  11. Future energy requirement
  12. Energy demand
  13. Solar technology
  14. Solar PV cell
  15. Fundamental biological process

Related Pages

UKRI project entry

UK Project Locations