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Tuesday, July 22, 2014

Daily Fusion-

A method chemically peels off the outer surface of a water-splitting catalyst, making it more efficient

Exfoliating Method Makes Water-Splitting Catalysts More Efficient

Scientists at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Lausanne (EPFL) have developed a new method for improving the catalysis of water-splitting reactions. »
The researchers' material, shown being installed at a site in the Middle East, combines sodium bentonite clay and polymers to create a substance that can withstand industrial waste

New Material Stores Industrial, Coal Plant Waste

Scientists at the University of Wisconsin-Madison have created a new material that combines sodium bentonite clay and polymers to create a substance that can withstand industrial, coal plant waste. »
western-power-distribution

Giant Lithium Titanate Battery to Be Connected to Grid in UK

The UK’s first 2 MW lithium titanate battery will be connected to the electrical grid later this year, as part of new research as a part of a research effort to tackle energy storage challenges. »
Global Innovation Index 2014

Report Shows European Countries as World’s Most Innovative

The Global Innovation Index 2014, co-authored by Samuel Curtis Johnson Graduate School of Management Dean Soumitra Dutta, was released in Sydney, Australia, July 18 at the B20 international business summit. »
A new catalyst improves the quality of oil produced from biomass before it is sent to the refinery

Catalyst Helps Get More Energy From Biofuel

A new, simple catalyst, developed at the University of Twente, improves the quality of oil produced from biomass before it is even sent to the refinery. »
A new and better way to study “hot” carriers in semiconductors, a major source of efficiency loss in solar cells, has been developed by scientists at Berkeley Lab

New Insight Into Hot Carriers May Help Make Better Solar Cells

Scientists at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory have developed a method to study the properties of “hot carriers” in semiconductors. This method could hold the key to the design and development of new, more efficient solar cells. »
Catalyst Promises Commercially Viable Hydrogen Production

Catalyst Promises Commercially Viable Hydrogen Production

Rutgers researchers have developed a new catalyst for commercially viable hydrogen production. It is based on carbon nanotubes and performs almost as well as cost-prohibitive platinum-based catalysts. »
Researchers suggest that incidents of wind turbines catching fire are a big problem

Study: Fire Is Second Leading Cause of Wind Farm Failure

Scientists at the Imperial College London suggest that incidents of wind turbines catching fire are a big problem that is not currently being fully reported. »
Rouzbeh Shahsavari, left, and Navid Sakhavand used computer simulations to predict the properties of a 3-D nanostructure made with boron nitride

3-D Nanostructure Could Efficiently Store Gas

Scientists at at Rice University predict functional advantages of a three-dimensional porous nanostructure that could benefit gas storage, nanoelectronics, and composite materials that perform multiple functions. »
The phosphorescent LEDs can reveal the presence of water under backlight. Water causes polymers to break in the LEDs, changing from phosphorescent light (green) to fluorescent light (blue)

Efficient Room-Temperature Phosphorescent OLEDs Developed

The team of Jinsang Kim, a professor of materials science and engineering and chemical engineering at the University of Michigan, developed bright, metal-free, organic, phosphorescent light emitters. »
Scientists calculate materials’ potential for use as electrodes in Li-ion batteries

Model Predicts Carbon Components’ Performance as Electrodes

Researchers at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory and Rice University have created a theoretical model that predicts how carbon components will perform as anodes in lithium-ion batteries. »
Lithium-ion battery testing

Technique Produces Next-Gen Electrodes for Li-Ion Batteries

Scientists at the University of Tokyo have developed an approach with industrial potential to produce nano-sized composite silicon-based powders as negative electrodes for the next generation lithium ion batteries. »
OPEC Annual Statistical Bulletin

OPEC’s Annual Statistical Bulletin 2014 Released

The Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) has released the 49th online edition of its Annual Statistical Bulletin. »
Transportation sector energy use by vehicle type

EIA Expects Light-Duty Vehicles’ Share in Energy Use to Decrease

Transportation energy consumption, including energy demand from light-duty vehicles, heavy-duty vehicles, aircraft, marine vessels, rail, and other sources, reached 13.8 million barrels per day oil equivalent (boe/d) in 2012 (28% of all energy consumption in the United States), down from a peak of 14.6 million boe/d in 2007. »
7/18/2014 This Week in Energy: Beyond Headlines

7/18/2014 This Week in Energy: Beyond Headlines

Here’s a bit of energy news that didn’t make it into our daily coverage during the past week. In this review, we collected some of less big, but nonetheless interesting news, of the week that went by, from the world of energy science and technology. »
Last year solar PV comprised roughly 92 GW of newly installed distributed power capacity (48%)

GlobalData: Solar PV Leads in Distributed Generation

A new study by GlobalData found that solar Photovoltaics (PVs) are already leading the world in the distributed power market consisting of 48 percent of the total distributed power capacity installed last year. In addition, the amount of annually installed distributed generation is slate to increase from 190 gigawatts in 2013 to roughly 389 gigawatts in 2019. »
The WA Parish plant showing the carbon capture facility that will be part of the world's largest post-combustion carbon capture-enhanced Oil Recovery project. The project is expected to be operational by the end of 2016

Construction Begins on World’s Largest Carbon Capture Project

The Department of Energy—in partnership with NRG Energy Inc. and JX Nippon—announced that construction has begun on the first commercial-scale post-combustion carbon capture retrofit project in the U.S., the largest such project in the world. »
Convective or Enhanced Geothermal System in South Australia. Geodynamics’ Innamincka Deeps Project power plant

Report Evaluates Geothermal Energy in Australia

The Board of the Australian Renewable Energy Agency (ARENA) has endorsed the International Geothermal Expert Group’s report on the barriers and opportunities for geothermal energy in Australia. »
California leads the nation in clean tech for the fifth consecutive year

Clean Edge Publishes 2014 U.S. Clean Tech Leadership Index

Clean Edge, an American research and advisory firm, has released its 2014 U.S. Clean Tech Leadership Index, which tracks the clean-tech activities of all 50 states and the 50 largest metro areas in the U.S. »
The European offshore wind industry — key trends and statistics 1st half 2014

EWEA Releases European Offshore Wind Industry Statistics

According to the report, on the first six months of 2014, Europe fully grid connected 224 offshore wind turbines in 16 commercial wind farms and one offshore demonstration site with a combined capacity totaling 781 MW. »
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