Month: September 2024

  • Revolutionary Catalyst Uses Sunlight To Turn Greenhouse Gases Into Valuable Chemicals

    Revolutionary Catalyst Uses Sunlight To Turn Greenhouse Gases Into Valuable Chemicals

    A chemical process developed by the McGill team could hasten progress toward carbon neutrality.

    Researchers at McGill University have developed a method to convert two of the most damaging greenhouse gases into valuable chemicals using sunlight. This breakthrough could both address climate change and offer a sustainable alternative for manufacturing some industrial products.

    “Imagine a world where the exhaust from your car or emissions from a factory could be transformed, with the help of sunlight, into clean fuel for vehicles, the building blocks for everyday plastics, and energy stored in batteries,” said co-first author Hui Su, a Postdoctoral Fellow in McGill’s Department of Chemistry. “That’s precisely the kind of transformation this new chemical process enables.”

    The research team’s new light-driven chemical process converts methane and carbon dioxide into green methanol and carbon monoxide in one reaction. Both products are highly valued in the chemical and energy sectors, the researchers said.

    Turning to nature for a sustainable solution
    The findings, published in Nature Communications, describe a novel mechanism rooted in nature’s own blueprint, similar to how photosynthesis enables plants to convert carbon dioxide and water into glucose and oxygen using sunlight.

    In this chemical process, a unique mix of gold, palladium, and gallium nitride acts as a catalyst. When exposed to sunlight, the substance triggers a reaction: an oxygen atom from carbon dioxide attaches to a methane molecule, producing green methanol. Carbon monoxide is created as a byproduct.

    “By tapping into the abundant energy of the sun, we can essentially recycle two greenhouse gases into useful products. The process works at room temperature and doesn’t require the high heat or harsh chemicals used in other chemical reactions,” said lead author Chao-Jun Li, a Distinguished James McGill Professor in McGill’s Department of Chemistry and a Canada Research Chair in Green/Organic Chemistry.

    “This innovation offers a promising path towards Canada’s target of net-zero emissions by 2050 and turns an environmental challenge into an opportunity for a more sustainable future,” said co-first author Jing-Tan Han, a PhD student in McGill’s Department of Chemistry.

  • GOP: New threat to Trump will boost his campaign

    GOP: New threat to Trump will boost his campaign

    Republican lawmakers think the second assassination attempt against former President Trump could give his struggling campaign a needed boost by energizing GPO voters and putting Democrats on the defensive over their warnings that his reelection represents a threat to democracy.

    Republican senators are reluctant to talk about Trump’s latest brush with death in crass political terms, but they predict it will have a rallying effect within their party.

    “I think people are going to rally to President Trump’s side. He’s under siege on so many fronts,” said Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.). “It’s a Republican today, it could be a Democrat tomorrow. The system is broken.”

    A second Republican senator who requested anonymity to discuss the political repercussions of a second assassination attempt predicted: “It will produce a rally-around effect.”

    The lawmaker said independent voters are likely to see Trump as “a victim here.”

    “I think that casts him in a more favorable light. That’s probably helpful to him. It’s something that breaks through with all voters. Who can not know about this?” the senator said. “It’s probably significant that way, but how long it will last, I don’t know.”

    Republicans say Trump got a big political boost after narrowly dodging an assassin’s bullet in Butler, Pa., in July, and some think it played into President Biden’s decision to drop out of the race a week later.

    When Republicans gathered in Milwaukee for the Republican National Convention a few days after the first assassination attempt, they were unified in a way they hadn’t been in years. The multiday event was capped off by Trump’s dramatic appearance to accept the party’s nomination with a white bandage on his right ear.