January 27, 2025 Researchers discover way to store hydrogen using lignin jet fuel
By Seth Truscott
An international team of scientists has discovered a way to store and release volatile hydrogen using lignin-based jet fuel that could open new pathways for sustainable energy production.
In a new, Washington State University Professor Bin Yang and colleaguesdemonstrated that a type of lignin-based jet fuel they developed can chemically bind hydrogen in a stable liquid form. The research has many potential applications in fuels and transportation and could ultimately make it easier to harness hydrogens potential as a high energy and zero emissions fuel source.
This new, lignin jet fuel-based technology could enable efficient, high-density hydrogen storage in an easy-to-handle sustainable aviation fuel, eliminating the need for pressurized tanks for storage and transport, Yang said.
For the study, researchers at WSU, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, the University of NewHaven, and Natural Resources Canada set out to address one of the major challenges with using hydrogen as a fuel source. The lightest elements low density and explosive nature make storage and transport technically challenging, inefficient, and expensive.
The January article details how the research team discovered the new hydrogen-storing process using chemical reactions that produced aromatic carbons and hydrogen from lignin jet fuel an experimental fuel developed by Yangs lab based on lignin, an organic polymer found in plants.
Hydrogen is a versatile energy carrier that could help the U.S. meet its targets for zero-emission mobility, integration of renewables, and decarbonization of industry, Yang said.
The discovery points to new uses for the lignin jet fuel developed at WSU by Yang, whothat creates the fuel from agricultural waste.that the sustainably produced fuel could increase engine performance and efficiency while dispensing with aromatics, the pollution-causing compounds found in conventional fuels.
This innovation offers promising opportunities for compatibility with existing infrastructure and economic viability for scalable production, Yang said. It could help create a synergistic system that enhances the efficiency, safety, and ecological benefits of both sustainable aviation fuel and hydrogen technologies.
Next, WSUresearchers will collaborate with scientists at the University of NewHaven to design an AI-driven catalyst that enhances and completes the reactions, making them more efficient and cost-effective.
came from the U.S.Department of Energys Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy and its Hydrogen and Fuel Cell Technologies Office.