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Tokyo Tech team develops high-performance bimetallic OER electrocatalyst for water splitting

Green Car Congress

A team led by researchers at Tokyo Institute of Technology (Tokyo Tech) have discovered a new bimetallic electrocatalyst for the oxygen evolution reaction (OER) in electrochemical water splitting: CaFe 2 O 4. In addition, the new OER boosting mechanism found in CaFe2O4 could lead to the engineering of other useful catalysts.

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Tokyo Tech team demonstrates visible-light photoelectrochemical water-splitting with cobalt-enhanced TiO2

Green Car Congress

Scientists at Tokyo Institute of Technology (Tokyo Tech) have demonstrated the first visible-light photoelectrochemical system for water splitting using TiO 2 enhanced with cobalt. The proposed approach is simple and represents a stepping stone in the quest to achieve affordable water splitting to produce hydrogen. —Prof.

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Integrating nanomaterial with light-absorbing molecule powers hydrogen production from water and sunlight

Green Car Congress

Scientists at Tokyo Institute of Technology (Tokyo Tech) have developed a hybrid material constructed from a metal oxide nanosheet and a light-absorbing molecule for splitting water molecules (H 2 O) to obtain hydrogen (H 2 ) under sunlight. Credit: Tokyo Tech. Dye-sensitized H 2 evolution using a wide-gap metal oxide.

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Virginia Tech team demonstrates green manufacturing method for Li-ion batteries

Green Car Congress

Researchers at Virginia Tech have demonstrated a green and more sustainable manufacturing method for LIBs in which no hazardous organic solvent is used during electrode manufacturing and recycling. A paper on their work is published in the journal iScience. —Li et al. —Li et al. 2020.101081.

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Geologists discover new path to rare earth mineral formation; implications for green energy and tech industries

Green Car Congress

Researchers from Trinity College Dublin have shed new light on the formation mechanisms of a rare earth-bearing mineral that is in increasingly high demand across the globe for its use in the green energy and tech industries. Vegetation appears red, grassland is light brown, rocks are black, and water surfaces are green. Image: NASA.

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Audi, Freiburg University of Mining and Technology investigating bio-leaching and membrane mining for high-tech elements

Green Car Congress

The Audi Environmental Foundation, a subsidiary of AUDI AG founded in 2009, has joined forces with the Freiberg University of Mining and Technology to research new ways of mining high-tech elements. The aim is to extract high-tech elements from ores without destroying the natural environment through large-scale drilling and blasting.

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Exploring Sydney’s Deep Tech Ecosystem

Cars That Think

Capturing headlines and attention with their renowned success stories, these, along with other global companies like Atlassian , Facebook, and Apple, have become the face of the tech industry. Deep tech – characterised by breakthrough scientific innovations – is where hidden impacts take place. billion raised, over $1.4