All living things require nitrogen
for survival, but the world depends on only two known processes to break
nitrogen's ultra-strong bonds and allow conversion to a form humans,
animals and plants can consume. One is a natural, bacterial process on
which farmers have relied since the dawn of agriculture. The other is
the century-old Haber-Bösch process, which revolutionized fertilizer
production and spurred unprecedented growth of the global food supply.
"We live in a sea of nitrogen, yet our bodies
can't access it from the air," says Utah State University biochemist
Lance Seefeldt. "Instead, we get this life-sustaining compound from
protein in our food."
Now, Seefeldt and colleagues announce a light-driven process
that could, once again, revolutionize agriculture, while reducing the
world food supply's dependence on fossil fuels and relieving
Haber-Bösch's heavy carbon footprint. The research team, which includes
USU's Seefeldt, Derek Harris, Andrew Rasmussen and Nimesh Khadka;
Katherine A. Brown and Paul W. King of Colorado's National Renewable
Energy Laboratory; Molly Wilker, Hayden Hamby and Gordana Dukovic of the
University of Colorado and Stephen Keable and John Peters of Montana
State University, publishes findings in the April 22, 2016 issue of the
journal Science.
"Our research demonstrates photochemical energy can replace
adenosine triphosphate, which is typically used to convert dinitrogen,
the form of nitrogen found in the air, to ammonia, a main ingredient of
commercially produced fertilizers," says Seefeldt, professor in USU's
Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry and an American Association for
the Advancement of Science Fellow.
Any way you slice it, he says, nitrogen fixation is an energy-intensive process.
"The Haber-Bösch process currently consumes about two percent of the
world's fossil fuel supply," Seefeldt says. "So, the new process, which
uses nanomaterials to capture light energy, could be a game-changer.""Using light directly to create a catalyst is much more energy efficient, says Brown, NREL research scientist. "This new ammonia-producing process is the first example of how light energy can be directly coupled to dinitrogen reduction, meaning sunlight or artificial light can power the reaction."
In addition to its practical applications, the research sheds light on fundamental aspects of how bacterial enzymes known as nitrogenases function; an area of chemistry Seefeldt has studied for nearly two decades.
Explore further:
Biochemists reveal new twist on old fuel source
More information:
"Light-driven dinitrogen reduction catalyzed by a CdS:nitrogenase MoFe protein biohybrid," Science, DOI: 10.1126/science.aaf2091
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