University of Cincinnati researchers convert carbon dioxide and sunlight into fuel

Researchers at the University of Cincinnati have successfully converted carbon dioxide and sunlight into fuel in a breakthrough for artificial photosynthesis research.  They did so by taking water, adding carbon dioxide and power it by clean solar energy. For some time researchers have been trying to figure out how to copy nature’s extremely efficient photosynthesis process, and thanks to a Tungara frog, Cincinnati researchers may be close to releasing the findings on how to do it and, most astonishingly, in a more efficient process than nature itself. Read full article here.

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Researchers at the University of Cincinnati have successfully converted carbon dioxide and sunlight into fuel in a breakthrough for artificial photosynthesis research.  They did so by taking water, adding carbon dioxide and power it by clean solar energy.

For some time researchers have been trying to figure out how to copy nature’s extremely efficient photosynthesis process, and thanks to a Tungara frog, Cincinnati researchers may be close to releasing the findings on how to do it and, most astonishingly, in a more efficient process than nature itself.

Read full article here.

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