Stanford researchers create new catalyst that can turn carbon dioxide into fuels

Photo of Aisulu Aitbekova, left, and Matteo Cargnello in front of the reactor where Aitbekova performed much of the experiments for this project. (Image credit: Mark Golden)
Oct 17 2019
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Recent work by Stanford and SLAC researchers have shown a promising approach to converting carbon dioxide which yields four times more ethane, propane and butane. The team created a new catalyst by combining ruthenium and iron oxide nanoparticles. The group would like to reduce the use of noble gases such as ruthenium and optimize the catalyst so it can selectively make only specific fuels.