Scientists from the University of Cambridge have developed a new reactor that converts natural gas (a common energy source primarily composed of methane) into two highly valuable resources: clean ...
An overview of the researchers’ continuous-flow reactor, which uses a technique known as floating catalyst chemical vapour deposition (FCCVD) to enable the continuous mass production of carbon ...
Photograph of a floating catalyst chemical vapor deposition reactor. Recycling gases through this floating catalyst chemical vapor deposition reactor offers a more efficient route to making carbon ...
While blue and green hydrogen dominate the low-carbon hydrogen conversation, turquoise hydrogen is quietly gaining momentum. Produced via methane pyrolysis, it delivers near-zero CO 2 emissions ...
ExxonMobil and BASF have entered a strategic development agreement to commercialize methane pyrolysis, a low-emission hydrogen technology that produces solid carbon instead of CO?. The collaboration ...
Tiny bolts of plasma, flickering inside a submerged glass tube, may have opened a new route for turning methane into liquid fuel. Chemists from Northwestern University have developed a way to convert ...