614569 The Important Role of Hydrogen in Synthetic Fuels

Monday, November 16, 2020
Synthetic & Renewable Fuels (TH) (PreRecorded+)
Adam Z. Weber, Energy Conversion Group, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, CA, Bryan S. Pivovar, Chemical and Materials Sciences Center, National Renewable Energy Laboratory, Golden, CO and Richard Boardman, Energy Systems Initiatives, Idaho National Laboratory, Idaho Falls, ID

Synthetically producing energy-rich chemicals from diverse and abundant domestic resources offers the promise of providing a plentiful supply of sustainable fuels to meet future U.S. energy needs. Opportunities for producing strategically-important synthetic fuels include hydrogen from water, hydrocarbon fuels from carbon dioxide and hydrogen/water, and ammonia from di-nitrogen and hydrogen/water. Most fuels are currently produced from fossil resources using energy-intense high temperature processes, but advanced processes for fuel synthesis utilizing various sustainable energy resources in conjunction with air and water can provide critical supplements to help meet near- and longer-term energy demands. Most pathways for synthetic fuels rely heavily on the availability of an abundant and sustainable supply of hydrogen. More generally, synthetic fuels production is an important end-use sector supported by the U.S. Department of Energy’s (DOE) H2@scale initiative. Specific challenges and opportunities for a new generation of synthetic fuels production will be discussed in the context of H2@Scale as well as other DOE efforts including the HydroGEN Energy Materials Network Consortium on Advanced Water Splitting Materials.

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