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      The decarbonisation of petroleum and other fossil hydrocarbon fuels for the facile production and safe storage of hydrogen

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          Abstract

          Microwave-stimulated catalytic dehydrogenation of fossil hydrocarbon fuels allows for the rapid production and safe storage of hydrogen.

          Abstract

          The importance of extracted and refined fossil carbonaceous fuels (petroleum, diesel etc.) to the development of human society cannot be overestimated. These natural resources have improved billions of lives, worldwide, in providing accessible, relatively inexpensive energy at nearly every scale. Notwithstanding the credible advances in renewable energy production over the past decade or so, the aerial combustion of coal, natural gas and liquid fossil fuels, given humankinds insatiable demand for power, will continue to be the ready source of more than 85% of the world's energy in the foreseeable and possibly the distant future. Human activities based on the combustion of fossil fuels, however, has led to significant anthropogenic emissions of carbon dioxide (CO 2) to the atmosphere – and that fact is now seen as the major contributor to global warming and climate change. To stabilise global mean temperatures will depend on the ultimate transformation of humankind's energy system to one that does not introduce CO 2 into the atmosphere. The hydrogen economy has long been mooted as a route to achieving the required net-zero emissions energy future. Paradoxically, fossil fuel sources such as petroleum, crude and extra-heavy crude oil, petrol, diesel and methane are reported here to produce high volumes of high-purity hydrogen through their microwave-initiated catalytic dehydrogenation using fine iron particles. The co-product of this dehydrogenation process, solid carbon, can be safely stored underground in perpetuity or converted in future to valuable hydrocarbons and other materials. Through their catalytic dehydrogenation to yield carbon-free hydrogen – rather than through their aerial combustion to produce carbon dioxide – petroleum and other fossil fuels can now serve as an energy pathway to stabilising global mean temperatures.

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          Most cited references23

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          Carbon capture and storage update

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            Iron encapsulated within pod-like carbon nanotubes for oxygen reduction reaction.

            Chainmail for catalysts: a catalyst with iron nanoparticles confined inside pea-pod-like carbon nanotubes exhibits a high activity and remarkable stability as a cathode catalyst in polymer electrolyte membrane fuel cells (PEMFC), even in presence of SO(2). The approach offers a new route to electro- and heterogeneous catalysts for harsh conditions.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                EESNBY
                Energy & Environmental Science
                Energy Environ. Sci.
                Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC)
                1754-5692
                1754-5706
                January 16 2019
                2019
                : 12
                : 1
                : 238-249
                Affiliations
                [1 ]King Abdulaziz City for Science and Technology (KACST) – Oxford Centre of Excellence in Petrochemicals (KOPRC), Inorganic Chemistry Laboratory, Department of Chemistry, University of Oxford
                [2 ]Oxford OX1 3QR
                [3 ]UK
                [4 ]Department of Materials, University of Oxford
                [5 ]Oxford
                [6 ]School of Engineering, Cardiff University
                [7 ]Cardiff
                [8 ]Petrochemical Research Institute, King Abdulaziz City for Science and Technology
                [9 ]Riyadh 11442
                [10 ]Kingdom of Saudi Arabia
                [11 ]Department of Materials Science and Metallurgy, University of Cambridge
                [12 ]Cambridge
                Article
                10.1039/C8EE02444H
                980354a4-e3cc-46ac-8429-13574a88f609
                © 2019

                http://rsc.li/journals-terms-of-use

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