Published by Todd Bush on December 23, 2024
Ammonia is the fuel for fertilizers and is also a high-energy, CO2-emitting ammonia. Researchers at the University of Illinois Chicago (UIC) with RMIT University Melbourne are advancing project-based innovative cleaner and cost-effective approaches to ammonia production.
>> In Other News: New Solar Discovery Could Revolutionize Hydrogen Production
Ammonia production presently involves the Haber-Bosch process, which is energy and hydrogen intensive; quite a large part of hydrogen derives from fossil fuels. Such characteristics make the ammonia industry an excellent contributor to global CO2 emissions.
A new method—lithium-mediated ammonia synthesis (LMAS)—was devised and developed by the team at the University of Illinois Chicago. The main process involves using the lithium electrode in conducting reactions with nitrogen and hydrogen.
This makes temperature processes unnecessary.
What really makes it different compared to others is that LMAS has the potential of drastically reducing production costs. Traditional green ammonia, for instance produced from renewable hydrogen, tends to be expensive, with prices ranging from $750 to $888 for every tonne produced.
The LMAS technology could as much as reduce this price by up to 60%, making it possible to produce ammonia for as little as $450 per tonne. This is as gigantic a boon as one can expect, especially because the key constituent used in the whole thing—the ethanol—is massively produced and relatively cheap.
This however is still very promising technology and has some critiques when it comes to cost reductions because it is debatable whether the technology would prove itself more efficient and economically sound in the long run than claimed.
Out here in the rest of the world, researchers at RMIT University in Melbourne are inventing a radically different concept of ammonia production. They built a liquid metal catalyst from copper and gallium for the first time for ammonia synthesis.
The ‘nano planets’ work well at lower pressure and temperature levels compared to the traditional ones since they only require 4 bars pressure and a temperature of 400 degrees C rather than the usual 200 bars and 500 degrees C.
The research shows that the method requires 20% less heat and 98% less pressure than conventional ammonia production (such as this one which is to be produced in America), which would be a great potential for energy savings. The catalyst is so efficient in splitting nitrogen and hydrogen that it allows for production on a very large scale while keeping the carbon footprint much smaller.
The process can play a very important role in the hydrogen economy, enabling ammonia to become a much safer and efficient carrier for hydrogen storage and transport. In the future, this could allow green energy to be sold rather than wasted in conversion losses associated with long-distance energy transportation.
Indeed, the ramifications of these two technologies may go beyond ammonia production. Ammonia is intended to serve an important future role as a clean shipping fuel since, it can be converted into hydrogen for use on-demand.
Apart from the liquid metal catalyst of RMIT and LMAS, they offer pathways to a more sustainable future for ammonia-reliant industries through reducing the carbon footprint associated with ammonia production.
The real test, however, would be to scale these technologies up to satisfy global demand.
The lifecycle emissions of the lithium-based LMAS technology have yet to be determined, along with issues of efficiency and scalability of both methods. Nonetheless, both teams are actively improving their respective technologies. They are in collaboration with industry partners exploring the pathways of commercialization.
These cutting-edge processes in ammonia production, which rely on lithium-mediated synthesis and liquid metal catalysis, have the potential to revolutionize energy consumption, cost, and CO2 emission.
They could, however difficult, contribute greatly to decarbonizing industries and make an important contribution to that most forward-looking and hopeful future (like the one discovered in a 20-million-year-old mine in Finland).
Follow the money flow of climate, technology, and energy investments to uncover new opportunities and jobs.
Inside This Issue 🌬️ Aircapture's Patented Microwave Direct Air Capture Technology Wins Tencent CarbonX 2.0 Award 🗾 Fujifilm, Tokyo Gas and TGES Agree to Supply City Gas Linked to Biomethane Produ...
Inside This Issue ⚡ FuelCell Energy and Fit Energy Announce Strategic Agreement for Up to 380 MW of Clean Power for Data Centers 🧭 China's Renewable Energy Mandates Set the Stage for Expanded Hydr...
Inside This Issue 🚢 Fortescue and CMB.TECH Sign Milestone Agreement for 12 Ammonia Bulkers to Accelerate Zero-Emissions Shipping 🌱 Mati Carbon Hits New Bar for Carbon Removal Certification With Is...
Aircapture's Patented Microwave Direct Air Capture Technology Wins Tencent CarbonX 2.0 Award
Aircapture will use the award to scale its DAC system engineered to reduce the cost of carbon capture at scale BERKELEY, Calif., June 25, 2026 /PRNewswire -- Aircapture, a Berkeley-based direct ai...
Groundwork BioAg Issues First Verified Carbon Credits Under Rootella Carbon® Program
Milestone issuance of high-durability soil carbon credits, the first to be issued under Verra VM0042 standard in the US, delivers highly-scalable carbon removal at a fraction of durable CDR costs. ...
HOPA Ports and the Mississaugas of the Credit Business Corporation (“MCBC”), the entity representing the business development interests of the Mississaugas of the Credit First Nation (“MCFN”), have...
Deep Sky Corporation today announced a strategic investment from Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corporation (SMBC), supporting the advancement of Japan's carbon dioxide removal (CDR) and direct air captur...
Follow the money flow of climate, technology, and energy investments to uncover new opportunities and jobs.