Solar-powered device captures carbon dioxide from air to make sustainable fuel

鈥淐O2 is a harmful greenhouse gas, but it can be turned into useful chemicals without contributing to global warming鈥

Cambridge researchers have developed a reactor that pulls carbon dioxide directly from the air and converts it into sustainable fuel, using sunlight as the power source.

The researchers, led by Professor Erwin Reisner, a Fellow of St John鈥檚 College, say their solar-powered reactor could be used to make fuel to power cars and planes, or the many chemicals and pharmaceuticals products we rely on. It could also be used to generate fuel in remote or off-grid locations.

Direct Air Capture device
The reactor captures carbon dioxide directly from the air and turns it into sustainable fuel.

Unlike most carbon capture technologies, the reactor does not require fossil-fuel-based power, or the transport and storage of carbon dioxide, but instead converts atmospheric CO2 into something useful using sunlight. The are reported in the journal, Nature Energy.

Carbon Capture and Storage (CCS) has been touted as a possible solution to the climate crisis, and has recently received 拢22bn in funding from the UK government. However, CCS is energy-intensive and there are concerns about the long-term safety of storing pressurised CO2 deep underground, although safety studies are currently being carried out.

鈥淎side from the expense and the energy intensity, CCS provides an excuse to carry on burning fossil fuels, which is what caused the climate crisis in the first place,鈥 said Professor Reisner, Professor of Energy and Sustainability at the University of Cambridge. 鈥淐CS is also a non-circular process, since the pressurised CO2 is, at best, stored underground indefinitely, where it鈥檚 of no use to anyone.鈥

鈥淲hat if instead of pumping the carbon dioxide underground, we made something useful from it?鈥 said first author Dr Sayan Kar from Cambridge鈥檚 Yusuf Hamied Department of Chemistry. 鈥淐O2 is a harmful greenhouse gas, but it can also be turned into useful chemicals without contributing to global warming.鈥

The focus of Professor Reisner鈥檚 research group is the development of devices that convert waste, water and air into practical fuels and chemicals. These devices take their inspiration from photosynthesis: the process by which plants convert sunlight into food. The devices don鈥檛 use any outside power: no cables, no batteries 鈥 all they need is the power of the sun.

The team鈥檚 newest system takes CO2 directly from the air and converts it into syngas: a key intermediate in the production of many chemicals and pharmaceuticals. The researchers say their approach, which does not require any transportation or storage, is much easier to scale up than earlier solar-powered devices.

The device, a solar-powered flow reactor, uses specialised filters to grab CO2 from the air at night, like how a sponge soaks up water. When the sun comes out, the sunlight heats up the captured CO2, absorbing infrared radiation and a semiconductor powder absorbs the ultraviolet radiation to start a chemical reaction that converts the captured CO2 into solar syngas. A mirror on the reactor concentrates the sunlight, making the process more efficient.

Erwin Reisner and Sayan Kar
Professor Erwin Reisner, left, and Dr Sayan Kar in the lab.

The team is currently working on converting the solar syngas into liquid fuels, which could be used to power cars, planes and more 鈥 without adding more CO2 to the atmosphere.

鈥淚f we made these devices at scale, they could solve two problems at once: removing CO2 from the atmosphere and creating a clean alternative to fossil fuels,鈥 said Dr Kar. 鈥淐O2 is seen as a harmful waste product, but it is also an opportunity.鈥

The team says that a particularly promising opportunity is in the chemical and pharmaceutical sector, where syngas can be converted into many of the products we rely on every day, without contributing to climate change. It is building a larger scale version of the reactor and hope to begin tests in the spring.

If scaled up, the researchers say their reactor could be used in a decentralised way, so that individuals could theoretically generate their own fuel, which would be useful in remote or off-grid locations.

鈥淚nstead of continuing to dig up and burn fossil fuels to produce the products we have come to rely on, we can get all the CO2 we need directly from the air and reuse it,鈥 said Professor Reisner. 鈥淲e can build a circular, sustainable economy 鈥 if we have the political will to do it.鈥

The technology is being commercialised with the support of Cambridge Enterprise, the University鈥檚 commercialisation arm. The research was supported in part by UK Research and Innovation (UKRI), the European Research Council, the Royal Academy of Engineering, and the Cambridge Trust. 

Reference:
Sayan Kar et al. 鈥.鈥 Nature Energy (2025). DOI: 10.1038/s41560-025-01714-y


Published 13/2/2025

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