An essential line of worldwide research towards a sustainable energy future is the materials and processes for carbon dioxide capture and storage. Energy from fossil fuels combustion always generates carbon dioxide, leading to a considerable environmental concern with the values of CO2 produced in the world. The increase in emissions leads to a significant challenge in reducing the quantity of this gas in the atmosphere. Many research areas are involved solving this problem, such as process engineering, materials science, chemistry, waste management, and politics and public engagement. To decrease this problem, green and efficient solutions have been extensively studied, such as Carbon Capture Utilization and Storage (CCUS) processes. In 2015, the Paris Agreement was established, wherein the global temperature increase limit of 1.5 °C above pre-industrial levels was defined as maximum. To achieve this goal, a global balance between anthropogenic emissions and capture of greenhouse gases in the second half of the 21st century is imperative, i.e., net-zero emissions. Several projects and strategies have been implemented in the existing systems and facilities for greenhouse gas reduction, and new processes have been studied. This review starts with the current data of CO2 emissions to understand the need for drastic reduction. After that, the study reviews the recent progress of CCUS facilities and the implementation of climate-positive solutions, such as Bioenergy with Carbon Capture and Storage and Direct Air Capture. Future changes in industrial processes are also discussed.
A series
of push–pull heterocyclic N,N-diphenylhydrazones were prepared to study the effect of
structural modifications (different π-spacers and electron-withdrawing
groups) on the optical (linear and nonlinear) and electronic properties
of the molecules. The photovoltaic response of dye-sensitized solar
cells assembled using nanocrystalline titania photosensitized with
the synthesized dyes was also studied. These heterocyclic push–pull
conjugated dyes involve N,N-diphenylhydrazones
as electron donors linked to bithiophene or thieno[3,2-b]thiophene spacers and were functionalized with carboxylic acid,
cyanoacetic acid, or dicyanovinyl acceptor groups. A combination of
Suzuki–Miyaura cross-coupling, Vilsmeier formylation, and condensation
reactions was used to synthesize the intermediates and final products.
Density functional theory (DFT) and time dependent-DFT calculations
were used to obtain information on conformation, electronic structure,
and electron distribution, both for the free dyes and those adsorbed
on TiO2. The results of this multidisciplinary study indicate
that dyes 5b and 6b have the strongest second-order
nonlinear optical response with hyperpolarizability values in the
range of β = 2330 × 10–30 to 2750 ×
10–30 esu, whereas photovoltaic power conversion
efficiencies reach values in the range of 0.7–3.0% for dyes 5a–b and 7c and were enhanced by coadsorbing
deoxycholic acid (0.8–5.1%).
The
effect of anchoring groups on the optical and electrochemical
properties of triphenylamine-thienothiophenes, and on the photovoltaic
performance of DSSCs photosensitized with the prepared dyes, was studied
using newly synthesized compounds with cyanoacetic acid or rhodanine-3-acetic
acid groups. Precursor aldehydes were synthesized through Suzuki cross-coupling,
whereas Knoevenagel condensation of these with 2-cyanoacetic acid
or rhodanine-3-acetic acid afforded the final
push–pull dyes. A comprehensive photophysical study was performed
in solution and in the solid state. The femtosecond time-resolved
transient absorption spectra for the synthesized dyes were obtained
following photoexcitation in solution and for the dyes adsorbed to
TiO2 mesoporous films. Information on conformation, electronic
structure, and electron distribution was obtained by density functional
theory (DFT) and time-dependent DFT calculations. Triphenylamine–thienothiophene
functionalized with a cyanoacetic acid anchoring group displayed the
highest conversion efficiency (3.68%) as the dye sensitizer in nanocrystalline
TiO2 solar cells. Coadsorption studies were performed for
this dye with the ruthenium-based N719 dye, and they
showed dye power conversion efficiencies enhanced by 20–64%.
The best cell performance obtained with the coadsorbed N719 and cyanoacetic dye showed an efficiency of 6.05%.
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