The Use of Artificial Leaves and Solar Cells for the Sequestration of Carbon
We propose implementing a mixture of man-made biological leaves and solar cells on to the tops of buildings. This allows for carbon dioxide to be taken out of the atmosphere while producing electricity to assist in powering buildings.By extracting chloroplasts from living plant cells and suspending them in silk protein, Julian Melchiorri created the first man-made leaf that is capable of artificially recreating photosynthesis. The question is why use an artificial leaf instead of living plants? Most living plants are limited to being kept in soil and need to constantly be watered. However, this man-made leaf is free of these limitations. The synthetic leaves can be produced in large sheets and placed on virtually any flat surface, while keeping that surface aesthetically pleasing. For example, living plants cannot be placed on a typical single family home, with a pitched roof, without heavy modifications to the building, whereas the artificial leaves made to fit the size of the roof and placed on top with only a few modifications such as adhesion and protection from the elements. Combining existing solar cell technology with innovative artificial leaves provides new ways to mitigate the causes of global warming, using the solar panels to garner clean energy and the artificial leaves to recycle the carbon dioxide into useable oxygen. This combination not only helps reduce global warming, but also uses the natural solar energy and carbon dioxide on our planet for a beneficial, eco-friendly cause.
Jim White
Department Chair
Thanks for this project, folks.The synthetic leaves are a fascinating technology, and I remember reading about them last year.
Question: Have you looked into recent developments with the synthetic leaves, or been able to contact their inventor?
Katie Cho
The inventor, Mr. Julian Melchiorri, had an intent for these leaves to be implemented in spacecraft to allow long-period space travel without the need for true biological leaves or oxygen tanks. He is currently developing the leaf to make it more efficient and also available to sell commercially. Our lead presenter, Justin Kim, has sent numerous emails to the developer and has not received a reply.
Geoffrey Bomarito
Materials Research Engineer
Cool idea! It would be awesome if we could implement this worldwide, but do you know if artificial leaves need to be in certain climates? For instance, would they work in very cold or very dry regions?
Katie Cho
The leaves are made out of real, extracted chloroplasts that have been suspended in a silk material. Similar to real leaves, the artificial leaves can carry out photosynthesis in the winter time when it is colder. However, as far as functioning in regions that are generally always cold and dry, this could be problematic if the leaf and its chloroplasts degrade over time. The silk material, however, is very durable and long-lasting. This can help prevent degradation and damaging of the chloroplasts.
It is also worth mentioning that the leaves were actually made to function in a zero-gravity environment in space. Although this does not directly address your question about colder or drier climates, it is evident that the leaf is full functioning in a very different environment than the ones that exist on Earth because of the strong, resistant material. We are still in the process of researching this topic. Thank you for your question.
Lauren McPhillips
PhD Candidate
Very intriguing concept. How would you suggest incentivizing and promoting implementation of solar cells and artificial leaves across NYC?
Katie Cho
In order to promote the implementation of the solar cells and artificial leaves across NYC and perhaps even other very developed states, we would have to begin by informing the owners/managers of the buildings of the issue. Then it would be important to tell them that they, especially, can provide a way to help by using PHS Beleaf’s idea with the solar cells and artificial leaves on their buildings. This could be done through the media – website, social networks, etc.
There are a handful of people that own a lot of the buildings in New York City. If we could reach those people and inform them of our project, they could potentially implement the leaves and solar panels on some or all of their buildings.
Sara Lacy
Senior Scientist
Interesting combination!
Would you please provide a little more detail about your calculations? You say that NYC uses 60,000 gigawatts —that’s power. How much energy did you calculate that NYC uses and over how long?
Do you know if solar panels can generate enough electricity for an apartment building?
Katie Cho
New York City consumes 60,000 gigawatt hours per year. We apologize for the confusion. This data was found on the Internet when we were conducting research. Most of the calculations that were done for this project were also actually based off of what we learned during our research period. For example, the amounts of carbon dioxide that real leaves and the artificial leaves take in per year were researched online and we used that to do basic calculations of how that, in combined use with the solar panels, could cancel out the carbon dioxide emissions in NYC.
A typical apartment building could have about 200 units. Each unit uses about 800 kilowatt hours per month. In total, that is 160,000 kilowatt hours per month for the entire building’s apartment rooms. We plan on implementing about 4000 square meters of solar panels on top of the buildings (however, this is dependent on the size of the rooftop). This will generate approximately 240,000 kilowatt hours per month which will provide enough electricity for the tenants to use.