MIT Researchers Engineer Viruses as Scaffolds for Photocatalytic Water Oxidation
. In plant cells, natural pigments are used to absorb sunlight, while catalysts then promote the water-splitting reaction. That’s the process Belcher and her team, including doctoral student Yoon Sung Nam, the lead author of the new paper, decided to imitate.
In the team’s system, the viruses simply act as a kind of scaffolding, causing the pigments and catalysts to line up with the right kind of spacing to trigger the water-splitting reaction. The role of the pigments is to act as an antenna to capture the light, and then transfer the energy down the length of the virus, like a wire, Belcher says. The virus is a very efficient harvester of light, with these porphyrins attached.
Our results suggest that the biotemplated nanoscale assembly of functional components is a promising route to significantly improved photocatalytic water-splitting systems.
—Nam et al.
Using the virus to make the system assemble itself improves the efficiency of the oxygen production fourfold, Nam says. The researchers hope to find a similar biologically based system to perform the other half of the process, the production of hydrogen. Currently, the hydrogen atoms from the water get split into their component protons and electrons; a second part of the system, now being developed, would combine these back into hydrogen atoms and molecules. The team is also working to find a more commonplace, less-expensive material for the catalyst, to replace the relatively rare and costly iridium used in this proof-of-concept study.
Thomas Mallouk, the DuPont Professor of Materials Chemistry and Physics at Pennsylvania State University, who was not involved in this work, says:
This is an extremely clever piece of work that addresses one of the most difficult problems in artificial photosynthesis, namely, the nanoscale organization of the components in order to control electron transfer rates. There is a daunting combination of problems to be solved before this or any other artificial photosynthetic system could actually be useful for energy conversion.
To be cost-competitive with other approaches to solar power, he adds, the system would need to be at least 10 times more efficient than natural photosynthesis, be able to repeat the reaction a billion times, and use less expensive materials.
Belcher will not speculate about how long it might take to develop this into a commercial product, but says that within two years she expects to have a prototype device that can carry out the whole process of splitting water into oxygen and hydrogen, using a self-sustaining and durable system.
The Italian energy company Eni provided funding for this work through the MIT Energy Initiative (MITEI).
Resources
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Yoon Sung Nam, Andrew P. Magyar, Daeyeon Lee, Jin-Woong Kim, Dong Soo Yun, Heechul Park, Thomas S. Pollom Jr, David A. Weitz and Angela M. Belcher (2010) Biologically templated photocatalytic nanostructures for sustained light-driven water oxidation. Nature Nanotechnology doi: 10.1038/nnano.2010.57

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