There is obviously more to this story than is been reported here. It
remains a mystery as to how, but the deliverable is extremely
important. I have not included the natural gas option for automotive
transportation because of the technical problems. Those issues were
manageable at the long haul transport level but certainly not by the
automobile.
This breakthrough means low pressure storage and no real containment
problems. Thus a natural gas solution is now available as fracking
produces ample energy reserves likely good through the end of this
century.
The need for this product was apparent decades ago. I read an
article addressing just this issue in the mid sixties in Scientific
American. If what is claimed here stands up, then someone has hit it
out of the park. Bravo and figure out how to buy shares.
Queen's develops
new environmentally friendly MOF production method
by Staff Writers
Belfast, Ireland (SPX) Oct 12, 2012
Chemists at Queen's
University Belfast have devised a novel, environmentally friendly
technique, which allows the rapid production of Metal-Organic
Frameworks porous materials (MOFs).
These
revolutionary nanomaterials have the potential to transform hazardous
gas storage, naturalgas vehicles and drug delivery and have
the highest surface-area of any known substance.
A sugar-lump sized
piece of MOF material can have the same surface area as a football
pitch.
Until now MOF
manufacturing techniques have been limited as they are costly, slow
and require large quantities of solvents, which can be toxic and
harmful to the environment.
Now, Professor Stuart
James in Queen's School of Chemistry and Chemical Engineering has
patented a novel technique for the synthesis of MOFs, allowing
affordable, large-scale deployment of these ground-breaking materials
for the first time.
Professor
James said: "Because of their extremely large surface-areas and
the flexibility with which their properties can be varied, MOFs can
be used as sponges, to soak up and store gases, or as filters to
separate and capture specific gases and chemicals. For example,
they can be used to greatly increase the storage capacity
of gas tanks.
"Now, for the
first time, our patented technology allows the synthesis of MOFs
without using any solvents, even water, and on greatly reduced
timescales, by making use of mechanochemistry.
"By simply
grinding together two cheap precursors in a basic milling machine,
the MOF material is produced in a matter of minutes, in a powder
form, ready for applications without further treatment, and without
generating solvent waste."
Granting of the patent
has enabled the formation of a new company called MOF Technologies
from Queen's spin-out arm QUBIS. Seed funding has been provided by
both QUBIS and NetScientific, which specialises in commercialising
technologies developed within university laboratories.
CEO
of MOF Technologies, Tom Robinson added: "The potential for this
technology is huge. Industry has known for some time about the
incredible properties of MOFs and hundreds of millions of dollars are
being spent on their development in research labs around the world.
We can now manufacture these materials in a scalable and
environmentally-friendly way, unlocking their potential to transform
the transport, gas storage and medical industries in
the years to come."
One
of the first areas expected to benefit from the technology is the
production of natural gas vehicles (NGVs).
Becoming increasingly popular due to a number of key advantages
over conventional, gasoline-fueled vehicles (natural gas is
currently half the price of petrol per mile travelled), NGVs still
have issues around storage and refueling. Typically, natural gas is
stored at very high pressures - up to 300 atmospheres - meaning
heavy, cylindrical steel storage tanks are required. These must be
filled at special refueling stations using large, expensive and
power-hungry compressors.
Explaining how MOFs
can provide a solution to this issue, Professor James said: "By
enabling higher storage capacities at much lower pressures, storage
tanks don't need to be as strong, so they can be much lighter and may
even be shaped to fit the free space available. The lower storage
pressure also means that new, costly refueling infrastructure such as
specialized filling stations is no longer required and opens up
the possibility of refueling vehicles in the home, from domestic gas
supplies. The same gas supplies that power our central heating and
gas ovens."
MOF Technologies is
also hoping to exploit opportunities in global carbon capture,
hazardous gas storage, natural gas processing and hydrocarbon
separations.
Frank Bryan, interim
CEO of QUBIS added: "QUBIS was delighted to partner with
NetScientific in the creation of our latest Queen's University
spin-out. QUBIS exists to support acclaimed Queen's academics, like
Professor James, in commercialising their cutting edge research and
we are confident this will be the latest in a long line of
successes."
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