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Introducing nanotechnology and energy Neil Coville School of Chemistry University of the Witwatersrand Media Round Table 3 rd March 2011
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Introducing nanotechnology and energy Neil Coville School of Chemistry University of the Witwatersrand Media Round Table 3 rd March 2011.

Jan 20, 2016

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Page 1: Introducing nanotechnology and energy Neil Coville School of Chemistry University of the Witwatersrand Media Round Table 3 rd March 2011.

Introducing nanotechnology and energy

Neil CovilleSchool of Chemistry University of the Witwatersrand

Media Round Table3rd March 2011

Page 2: Introducing nanotechnology and energy Neil Coville School of Chemistry University of the Witwatersrand Media Round Table 3 rd March 2011.

Richard Feynman “Room at the bottom”

“Why cannot we write the entire 24 volumes of the Encyclopedia Britannica on the head of a pin?”

December 29th 1959 at an annual meeting Engineering and Science

Page 3: Introducing nanotechnology and energy Neil Coville School of Chemistry University of the Witwatersrand Media Round Table 3 rd March 2011.
Page 4: Introducing nanotechnology and energy Neil Coville School of Chemistry University of the Witwatersrand Media Round Table 3 rd March 2011.

Hard definition

•Nanoscience deals with the size regime in which properties change with the object size.

• Objects to be studied have one dimension of less than 100 nanometers

So – what is nano!!

Page 6: Introducing nanotechnology and energy Neil Coville School of Chemistry University of the Witwatersrand Media Round Table 3 rd March 2011.
Page 7: Introducing nanotechnology and energy Neil Coville School of Chemistry University of the Witwatersrand Media Round Table 3 rd March 2011.

Making computer chips

Page 8: Introducing nanotechnology and energy Neil Coville School of Chemistry University of the Witwatersrand Media Round Table 3 rd March 2011.

How do we see at the nano level ?

Electron microscope

Access to new instrumentation has led to the development of nanoscience and nanotechnology

Page 9: Introducing nanotechnology and energy Neil Coville School of Chemistry University of the Witwatersrand Media Round Table 3 rd March 2011.

Humanity’s top ten problemsfor the next 50 years

1. Energy

2. Water

3. Food

4. Environment

5. Poverty

6. Terrorism and war

7. Disease

8. Education

9. Democracy

10. Population2003 6.3 Billion People2050 9-10 Billion People

Smalley

Page 10: Introducing nanotechnology and energy Neil Coville School of Chemistry University of the Witwatersrand Media Round Table 3 rd March 2011.

Millions of Barrels per Day (Oil Equivalent)

300

200

100

0

1860 1900 1940 1980 2020 2060 2100Source: John F. Bookout (President of Shell USA) ,“Two Centuries of Fossil Fuel Energy” International Geological Congress, Washington DC; July 10,1985. Episodes, vol 12, 257-262 (1989).

World Energy

Page 11: Introducing nanotechnology and energy Neil Coville School of Chemistry University of the Witwatersrand Media Round Table 3 rd March 2011.

Some information

•Enough fossil fuel for 200 – 300 years•Currently: >85% energy from fossil fuels•But world will double energy use by 2050• Global warming ??Lewis and Nocera, PNAS 103 (2006) 15729

Alternatives

•Biofuels•Wave/wind/thermal•Nuclear

“No country has a policy against economic growth”

Page 12: Introducing nanotechnology and energy Neil Coville School of Chemistry University of the Witwatersrand Media Round Table 3 rd March 2011.

165,000 TW of sunlight hit the earth every day

Consumption2001 – 13 TW 2050 – 27 TW2100 – 43 TW

Page 13: Introducing nanotechnology and energy Neil Coville School of Chemistry University of the Witwatersrand Media Round Table 3 rd March 2011.

• Generation (the sun)• Conversion (electricity, thermal)• Collection and Storage (chemical bonds; e.g. hydrogen)• Then utilization

Energy issues for solar

Page 14: Introducing nanotechnology and energy Neil Coville School of Chemistry University of the Witwatersrand Media Round Table 3 rd March 2011.

Energy issues for solar

But cost is too high !!!!

• Generation (the sun)• Conversion (electricity, thermal)• Collection and Storage (chemical bonds; e.g. hydrogen)• Then utilization

Page 15: Introducing nanotechnology and energy Neil Coville School of Chemistry University of the Witwatersrand Media Round Table 3 rd March 2011.

Carbon‘To carbon, the element of life, my first literary dream ………….’ Primo Levi

• Cheap/abundant• Light weight• Many shapes• Conductor

Page 16: Introducing nanotechnology and energy Neil Coville School of Chemistry University of the Witwatersrand Media Round Table 3 rd March 2011.

(a)

(b) (c)

(d) (e) (f)

(a)

A carbon tool kit – bits and pieces for making devices

Page 17: Introducing nanotechnology and energy Neil Coville School of Chemistry University of the Witwatersrand Media Round Table 3 rd March 2011.

Wool fibers

Page 18: Introducing nanotechnology and energy Neil Coville School of Chemistry University of the Witwatersrand Media Round Table 3 rd March 2011.

• Photovoltaics (solar cells) • Batteries• Fuel Cells• Lightweight materials• Fuel rods, nuclear materials, • Electrochemistry and solid-state energy applications • Catalyst applications

Using the materials?

Page 19: Introducing nanotechnology and energy Neil Coville School of Chemistry University of the Witwatersrand Media Round Table 3 rd March 2011.

Buckypaper

Page 20: Introducing nanotechnology and energy Neil Coville School of Chemistry University of the Witwatersrand Media Round Table 3 rd March 2011.

• The nano revolution relates to a mindset that considers how size relates to a materials property.• This permits an understanding of the properties of materials at a new level.

• Can apply to the ENERGY field:a) In making devices smaller b) Making new devices that are small

This is made possible by the availability of modern materials and techniques

Conclusions

Page 21: Introducing nanotechnology and energy Neil Coville School of Chemistry University of the Witwatersrand Media Round Table 3 rd March 2011.

The new faces in SA Nanoscience

Page 22: Introducing nanotechnology and energy Neil Coville School of Chemistry University of the Witwatersrand Media Round Table 3 rd March 2011.
Page 23: Introducing nanotechnology and energy Neil Coville School of Chemistry University of the Witwatersrand Media Round Table 3 rd March 2011.

• Consumption statistics show that around 30% of the energy available at source is lost before it reaches end-user.

• 42% of non-transport energy consumption is used to heat buildings, and in turn, a third of this energy is lost through windows.

• Transportation represents 74% (of UK) oil usage and 25% of UK carbon emissions.

• To achieve the 2010 EU 5.75% bio-fuels target would require 19% of arable land to be converted from food to bio-fuel crops.

Some key energy facts