Imagine a synthetic material that could grow like trees, taking
the carbon from the carbon dioxide and incorporating it into the material’s
backbone. A material designed by MIT chemical engineers can
react with carbon dioxide from the air, to grow, strengthen, and even
repair itself. The polymer, which might someday be used as construction or
repair material or for protective coatings, continuously converts the
greenhouse gas into a carbon-based material that reinforces itself.
Diagrams illustrate the
self-healing properties of the new material. At top, a crack is created in
the material, which is composed of a hydrogel (dark green) with plant-derived
chloroplasts (light green) embedded in it. At bottom, in the presence of
light, the material reacts with carbon dioxide in the air to expand and fill
the gap, repairing the damage. Courtesy of the researchers
|
The Current Version
The current version of the new material is a synthetic gel-like
substance that performs a chemical process similar to the way plants
incorporate carbon dioxide from the air into their growing tissues. The
material might, for example, be made into panels of a lightweight matrix that
could be shipped to a construction site, where they would harden and solidify
just from exposure to air and sunlight, thereby saving on the energy and cost
of transportation.
The Findings
The finding is described in a paper in the journal Advanced
Materials, by Professor Michael Strano, postdoc Seon-Yeong Kwak, and eight
others at MIT and at the University of California at Riverside.
The New Concept
This is a completely new concept in materials science. The
carbon-fixing materials don’t exist yet today outside of the biological realm.
This materials that can transform carbon dioxide in the ambient air into a
solid, stable form, using only the power of sunlight, just as plants do.
Avoids Fossil Fuels , and sinks Carbon Dioxide
Developing a synthetic material that not only avoids the use of
fossil fuels for its creation, but actually consumes carbon dioxide from the
air, has obvious benefits for the environment and climate, the researchers
point out.
Imagine a synthetic material that could grow like trees, taking
the carbon from the carbon dioxide and incorporating it into the material’s
backbone.
Chloroplasts : as a catalyst
The material the team used in these initial proof-of-concept
experiments did make use of one biological component — chloroplasts, the
light-harnessing components within plant cells, which the researchers obtained
from spinach leaves. The chloroplasts are not alive but catalyze the reaction
of carbon dioxide to glucose.
Isolated chloroplasts are quite unstable, meaning that they tend
to stop functioning after a few hours when removed from the plant. In their
paper, Strano and his co-workers demonstrate methods to significantly increase
the catalytic lifetime of extracted chloroplasts. In ongoing and future work,
the chloroplast is being replaced by catalysts that are nonbiological in
origin, Strano explains.
The material the researchers used, a gel matrix composed of a
polymer made from aminopropyl methacrylamide (APMA) and glucose, an enzyme
called glucose oxidase, and the chloroplasts, becomes stronger as it
incorporates the carbon. It is not yet strong enough to be used as a building
material, though it might function as a crack filling or coating material, the
researchers say.
The team has worked out methods to produce materials of this type
by the ton, and is now focusing on optimizing the material’s properties.
Commercial applications such as self-healing coatings and crack filling are
realizable in the near term, they say, whereas additional advances in backbone
chemistry and materials science are needed before construction materials and
composites can be developed.
One key advantage of such materials is they would be
self-repairing upon exposure to sunlight or some indoor lighting. If the surface is scratched or cracked, the affected area grows
to fill in the gaps and repair the damage, without requiring any external
action.
While there has been widespread effort to develop self-healing
materials that could mimic this ability of biological organisms, the researchers
say, these have all required an active outside input to function. Heating, UV
light, mechanical stress, or chemical treatment were needed to activate the
process. By contrast, these materials need nothing but ambient light, and they
incorporate mass from carbon in the atmosphere, which is ubiquitous.
The material starts out as a liquid, and soon it starts to grow
and cluster into a solid form. Materials science has never produced anything
like this. These materials mimic some aspects of something living, even though
it’s not reproducing. Because the finding opens up a wide array of
possible follow-up research, the U.S. Department of Energy is sponsoring a new
program directed by Strano to develop it further.
Significance
The work shows that carbon dioxide need not be purely a burden and
a cost. It is also an opportunity in this respect. There’s carbon everywhere.
We build the world with carbon. Humans are made of carbon. Making a material
that can access the abundant carbon all around us is a significant opportunity
for materials science. In this way, our work is about making materials that are
not just carbon neutral, but carbon negative
No comments:
Post a Comment