John Kitchin Awarded DOE Grant
Carnegie Mellon University's John Kitchin was awarded a five-year
$750,000 grant from the U.S. Department of Energy to develop new
materials for producing hydrogen and oxygen from water, using
electrochemistry.
"I was elated to hear that my research had been selected for such a prestigious honor," said Kitchin, an assistant professor of chemical engineering at Carnegie Mellon. "This work tackles one of the primary hurdles in efficiently obtaining hydrogen from water."
Kitchin is one of 69 researchers nationwide to receive funding under
the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act as part of the Energy
Department's Early Career Research Program.
The new effort is designed to bolster the nation's scientific
workforce by providing support to exceptional researchers during their
crucial early career years, when many scientists do their most
formative work.
"This research has unlimited potential for helping the United States
become more energy efficient as Kitchin and his research team work to
find more efficient ways to store energy," said Andrew Gellman, head of
Carnegie Mellon's Chemical Engineering Department and research director
of a new consortium created to support the research program of the
National Energy Technology Laboratory (NETL), part of the U.S.
Department of Energy's national laboratory system.
Kitchin said his research is a great way to give the nation's "hydrogen economy" a jumpstart.
"Our research is designed to make hydrogen production from water
more efficient, which will ultimately enable the development of future
energy systems to store intermittent renewable energy in chemical form,
and to make better use of biomass to fuel everything from cars to large
turbines and factories," he said.
"The oxygen produced from this process may play a crucial role in
helping to manage the CO2 emissions through advanced fossil energy
power systems such as oxycombustion and gasification."
Story originally published at: http://www.cmu.edu/homepage/environment/2010/winter/hydrogen-from-water.shtml.