Position Paper on Hydrogen Economy

Page 68

POSITION PAPER ON HYDROGEN ECONOMY

Biological processes Hydrogen produced through natural biological processes is known as bio-hydrogen. It can be categorised into four primary groups: water-splitting photosynthesis, photo-fermentation, dark fermentation and microbial electrolysis cells. For each group, bio-hydrogen is either evolved from single microbial species or by a mixed consortium of species, with the latter involving some H2 producing species while the rest of the species consuming the H2 for their energy requirement. Initial research in this field focused on pure cultures with a defined substrate as the carbon source. The utilisation of wastewater for substrate that is more practical makes the mixed microbial population more favourable for scaled-up production. Furthermore, the mixed consortium of species is preferred because of operational ease, stability, diversity of biochemical functions and a wider range of substrates for a source of fuel. a.

Water-splitting photosynthesis

The water-splitting photosynthesis process, also known as bio-photolysis, utilises simple steps in producing H2 using light energy and water by the oxygenic photosynthetic microorganisms, such as green algae and cyanobacteria. There are two pathways: the direct and the indirect. The direct bio-photolysis derives the electrons from the light energymediated water splitting with the assistance of photosystem II (PS II) and photosystem I (PS I) (Figure 41). For the indirect bio-photolysis, photosynthesis converts the light energy along with CO2 fixation into carbohydrates before it is turned to H2 through other pathways, such as fermentation. The Fe-hydrogenase enzyme responsible for the evolution of H2 in green algae is O2-sensitive, which becomes the drawback of the bio-photolysis. Unlike cyanobacteria, the production of H2 occurs in the heterocyst, which protects its O2-sensitive nitrogenase from O2 exposure. Studies such as replacement of the photosynthetically evolved O2 with Argon gas, protein engineering for O2-tolerant hydrogenases, replacing hydrogenases in green algae or replacing hydrogenase with nitrogenase in cyanobacteria, mutation of the PS II proteins, changes in operational conditions and heterologous expression of hydrogenase and Pd are done to overcome these disadvantages.

Figure 41: Hydrogen Production from Direct and Indirect Bio-photolysis

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REFERENCES

8min
pages 131-139

5.0 CONCLUSIONS

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page 130

Figure 61: 8i Ecosystem Analysis (ASM, 2020

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page 120

Figure 59: National Niche Areas across 10 socio-economic drivers (ASM, 2020

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page 118

Figure 58: 10-10 MySTIE Framework (source: ASM (2020

1min
page 117

4.3 13th & 14th Malaysia Plans 2026-2035 (Medium Term

5min
pages 105-110

4.4 15th, 16th, 17th & 18th Malaysia Plans 2036-2050 (Long Term

3min
pages 111-115

4.2 12th Malaysia Plan 2021-2025 (Short Term

4min
pages 101-104

Figure 56: Hydrogen Roadmap in 2020

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page 100

4.1.4 Strategy Recommendations - Hydrogen Economy Roadmap 2020

2min
pages 98-99

4.1.3 Barriers of Transition to Hydrogen Economy

2min
page 97

4.1.2 Potential for Malaysia to become a pioneering country in Hydrogen Economy

2min
page 96

4.1.1 Malaysian Hydrogen Economy Roadmap

2min
page 95

Figure 54: Average Solar Irradiance, kWh/m2/day

1min
page 84

Figure 52: Number of NGV Stations by States

3min
pages 81-82

Figure 55: Malaysia’s Hydrogen Roadmap 2006

9min
pages 87-93

Figure 53: Solar Irradiance Map of Malaysia

1min
page 83

Figure 50: Map of Hydrogen Refueling Stations in Asia

4min
pages 78-79

Figure 49: Cost of Green Hydrogen from Zero Carbon Renewable Energy

1min
page 76

Figure 46: Schematic of a Microbial Fuel Cell

1min
page 74

Figure 42: Hydrogen Production from Microbial Electrolysis Cell

5min
pages 69-70

Figure 44: Schematics of a Solid Oxide Fuel Cell

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page 72

Figure 41: Hydrogen Production from Direct and Indirect Bio-photolysis

1min
page 68

Figure 45: Schematics of a Direct Methanol Fuel Cell

2min
page 73

Figure 40: Basic Principles of PEC

1min
page 67

Figure 39: Layout of a Solid Oxide Electrolysis System

1min
page 66

Figure 38: Schematic Diagram of a PEM electrolysis system

1min
page 65

1. INTRODUCTION

5min
pages 22-25

Figure 22: Net Energy Metering (NEM) by Region

1min
page 42

Figure 35: Layout of alkaline electrolysis for AEL

1min
page 63

Figure 18: Malaysia’s petroleum production and consumption 2002-1016 (thousand barrels per day

1min
page 39

Figure 15: ASEAN Fossil Oil Reserve 2017 (Mtoe

1min
page 37

Figure 31: The Hydrogen Economy

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page 53

Figure 19: Natural gas resources and consumption by region, 2013

1min
page 40

3.2 Hydrogen Production and Storage Technology

1min
page 56
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