Science and Technology
Nigerian Scientist's Conversion of Urine Into Flammable Gases Gets Patent Source: http://www.ereporter.com.ng/index.php/more-news/science-tech-news/item/1290-nigerian-scientist-s-conversion-of-urine-into-flammable-gases-gets-patent
A
Nigerian scientist has obtained a patent for his pioneer work in
converting urine into flammable gases. The breakthrough of Ejikeme
Patrick Nwosu, 31-year-old, has raised the hope of the world in using
urine to solve its energy crisis.
Nwosu
got Patent No NG/P/20/2013/699 for developing a process for conversion
of urine into hydrogen-ammonia rich flammable gases and fire resistant
materials.
Nwosu,
a graduate of Pure and Industrial Chemistry from Nnamdi Azikiwe
University, Awka (NAU), Anambra State with a Master of Science degree in
Organic Chemistry from the University of Ibadan (UI), Oyo State, had
claimed this process could replace fossil fuel in the near future.
Also,
Indian researchers have developed "The Urine Engine." The study was
published recently in OSR Journal Of Environmental Science, Toxicology
And Food Technology by Yogendra G. Nandagaoli of the Department of
Mechanical Engineering, and Rasika R. Kakade of the Department of
E&TC, SGBAU, Amravati, India.
The
Patent Certificate for Nwosu's discovery with No 000698 granted for a
period of 20 years on October 13, 2014, and signed by the Registrar of
Patents and Designs reads: "The Federal Government being willing to
encourage all inventions which may be for public good, is please to
accede to the request by Ejikeme Patrick Nwosu of 3 Jaba Road, Ungwan
Boro, Kaduna South, Kaduna State, Nigeria, C/O Edumejowo &
Associates, Suite 14 Peemas Complex, 13 Jere Street by Rita Lori Hotel,
Garki II, Abuja, for the sole use and advantage of an Invention for:
Conversion of Urine into Hydrogen-Ammonia Rich Flammable Gases and Fire
Resistant Materials... "
Nwosu
told The Guardian: "It is obvious that our crude oil reserves will be
exhausted in few decades to come. When this happens we will be forced to
use other sources of fuel, but it would be more prudent to start acting
prior to such state. Apart from this, fossil fuel has a lot of dangers
that come with it; chief among them is climatic disorders. In order to
leave our world better than I met it, I ventured into research on urine
and have made some notable successes that can change the world forever.
"After
years of study, I have successfully developed a process that converts
urine into flammable gases. These gases can be used as an alternative to
fossil fuel. This process is cheap, easy and very feasible. It requires
treating urine with some substances I identified after years of study.
No external heat is required for this process. The flammable gas is rich
in hydrogen and ammonia. Both can be used directly to generate energy
or could be further purified upon chemical treatments to get hydrogen of
very high purity. Hydrogen is the best fuel for engines because it
poses no threat to the environment, it produces water vapour as a
by-product."
Nwosu
said the United States government alone had invested billions of
dollars in projects that could produce hydrogen from various sources and
it was high time the government acted on this.
He
further explained: "Trillions of litres of urine are generated annually
globally with an average adult producing about 2.5 litres daily.
Contrary to people's view of urine as a waste, I see urine as the
solution to our highly sought clean, renewable and affordable energy.
Very soon, urine will be for sale. You are welcome to our laboratory
anytime for demo, while coming do so with a bottle or bottles of urine
and watch me change it to fire."
Nwosu,
who says he is the chief executive officer (CEO) and director of
Research at Lumos Laboratories and Company Nigeria, Kaduna, said: "It is
obvious that our crude oil reserves will be exhausted in few decades to
come. When this happens we will be forced to use other sources of fuel,
but it would be more prudent to start acting prior to such state.
Besides this, fossil fuel has a lot of dangers that come with it; chief
among them are climatic disorders.
"In
order to leave our world better than I met it, I ventured into research
on urine and have made some notable successes that can change the world
forever."
The
Indian researchers concluded: "The energy required for urea
electrolysis is 35 per cent less, which generated 40 per cent cheaper
hydrogen compared to water electrolysis. For this system, the exhaust
gas is the water vapour. It does not emit carbon monoxide like the
normal fuel-based engine so this ensures clean environment for people.
"Again,
one litre of urine can give you six hours of electricity. The source of
urine is naturally available from human being and cattle so there is
availability of hydrogen easily. Using an electrolytic approach to
produce hydrogen from urine is the most abundant waste on Earth at a
fraction of the cost of producing hydrogen from water.
"The
hydrogen gas gives many more applications in all the fields such as in
cars, vehicles and it is burned to provide heat. But it requires special
arrangement. It is used to drive turbine, in internal combustion
engines for motive and electrical power. Urea naturally hydrolyses into
ammonia before generating gas phase ammonia emissions. These emissions
lead to the formation of ammonium sulphate and nitrate particulates in
the air, which cause a variety of health problems including chronic
bronchitis, asthma attacks and premature death."
They
continued: "Nothing is really a waste in the real sense of the word.
Almost anything one can think of is reusable. Everything has some value
one way or another. The pollution increases in the world due to carbon
monoxide poisoning from fossil-fuel engine, the movement of petroleum
products prices, environmental degradation and the recent fuel subsidy
scam.
"So
we started looking at different materials, one of which was urine. It
is liquid, something that has hydrogen molecules in it. The amount of
voltage it takes to break a urine molecule is less than the amount it
takes to break the hydrogen molecule in water. So urine electrolyzed,
releasing hydrogen- oxygen gas mixture from it, then hydrogen gas is
purified. The purified hydrogen gas is then pushed into the engine."
Urine turned into hydrogen fuel
In
a report published 2009 in Discovery News, the Ohio University
scientists said they could create large amounts of cheap hydrogen from
urine that could be burned or used in fuel cells, using a nickel-based
electrode.
A
professor at Ohio University developing the technology, Gerardine
Botte, said: "One cow can provide enough energy to supply hot water for
19 houses. Soldiers in the field could carry their own fuel."
Scientists
from Ohio University, United States, were among the first, in July
2009, to describe the possibility of developing urine-powered cars,
homes and personal electronic devices in the Royal Society of
Chemistry's Chemistry Communications.
The
study on the new technology that accomplishes the direct conversion of
urine and urea to pure hydrogen via electrochemical oxidation with an
inexpensive nickel catalyst is titled "Urea electrolysis: direct
hydrogen production from urine."
The
researchers wrote: "The utilisation of wastewater for useful fuel has
been gathering recent attention due to society's need for alternative
energy sources. The electroxidation of urea found at high concentrations
in wastewater simultaneously accomplishes fuel production and
remediation of harmful nitrogen compounds that currently make their way
into the atmosphere and groundwater. Pure hydrogen was collected in the
cathode compartment at 1.4 V cell potential, where water electrolysis
does not occur appreciably. It was determined that an inexpensive nickel
catalyst is the most active and stable for the process."
Also,
the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) reported on August 19, 2010,
of a research team at Heriot-Watt University, United Kingdom,
investigating whether urine could be used as a source of renewable
energy.
Indeed,
U.S. researchers had in 2009 developed an efficient way of producing
hydrogen from urine - a feat that could not only fuel the cars of the
future, but could also help clean up municipal wastewater.
Using
hydrogen to power cars has become an increasingly attractive
transportation fuel, as the only emission produced is water - but a
major stumbling block is the lack of a cheap, renewable source of the
fuel.
Botte
may now have found the answer, using an electrolytic approach to
produce hydrogen from urine - the most abundant waste on Earth - at a
fraction of the cost of producing hydrogen from water.
Botte
said the idea came to her several years ago at a conference on fuel
cells, where they were discussing how to turn clean water into clean
power. "I wondered how we could do this better," she added - so started
looking at waste streams as a better source of molecules from which to
produce hydrogen.
Urine's
major constituent is urea, which incorporates four hydrogen atoms per
molecule - importantly, less tightly bonded than the hydrogen atoms in
water molecules. Botte used electrolysis to break the molecule apart,
developing an inexpensive new nickel-based electrode to selectively and
efficiently oxidise the urea. To break the molecule down, a voltage of
0.37V needs to be applied across the cell - much less than the 1.23V
needed to split water.
Electrolysis breaks down the urea, releasing hydrogen
Botte
told Chemistry World: "During the electrochemical process the urea gets
adsorbed on to the nickel electrode surface, which passes the electrons
needed to break up the molecule. Pure hydrogen is evolved at the
cathode, while nitrogen plus a trace of oxygen and hydrogen were
collected at the anode. While carbon dioxide is generated during the
reaction, none is found in the collected gasses as it reacts with the
potassium hydroxide in the solution to form potassium carbonate."
The
group initially tested their process with 'synthetic' urine made of
dissolved urea, but also showed that the process works just as well with
real human urine. "It took us some time to get clearance to work with
human urine - which held up publication of the research," Botte said.
According
to Botte, currently available processes that can remove urine from
water are expensive and inefficient. Urea naturally hydrolyses into
ammonia before generating gas phase ammonia emissions. These emissions
lead to the formation of ammonium sulphate and nitrate particulates in
the air, which cause a variety of health problems including chronic
bronchitis, asthma attacks and premature death.
The
group is currently conducting long-term stability studies on their
electrolysis systems, as well as conducting computational experiments to
better understand the mechanisms at work.
Botte
believes the technology could be easily scaled up to generate hydrogen
while cleaning up the effluent from sewage plants. "We do not need to
reinvent the wheel as there are already electrolysers being used in
different applications." She believes the only the thing that would
hamper the process would be the presence of a lot of salt.
Bruce
Logan, an expert in energy generation from wastewater and director of
Pennsylvania State University's H2E Center and Engineering Environmental
Institute, applauded Botte's efforts in developing a more energy
efficient way of producing hydrogen than splitting water. However, he
did caution that urea gets converted very quickly into ammonia by
bacteria, which could limit the usefulness of the technique.
However,
Logan does feel that it would be a good idea to start saving up urine -
although not for the hydrogen. "You have to remember the P [phosphorus]
in pee - globally we need to start thinking about conserving phosphorus
for fertiliser, because, just like oil, one day the deposits are all
going to run out and we need to start building phosphorus recycling into
our infrastructure," he said. (Guardian)
Source: http://www.ereporter.com.ng/index.php/more-news/science-tech-news/item/1290-nigerian-scientist-s-conversion-of-urine-into-flammable-gases-gets-patent
Source: http://www.ereporter.com.ng/index.php/more-news/science-tech-news/item/1290-nigerian-scientist-s-conversion-of-urine-into-flammable-gases-gets-patent
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