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Department of Chemistry, University of Missouri – Kansas City, 5100 Rockhill Road, Kansas City, USA
E-mail: chenxiaobo@umkc.edu
b
State Key Laboratory of Catalysis, Dalian Institute of Chemical Physics, Chinese Academy of Sciences, 457 Zhongshan Road, Dalian 116023, China
E-mail: canli@dicp.ac.cn
c
Institut des sciences et ingénierie chimiques, Ecole polytechnique fédérale de Lausanne, EPFL SB ISIC LPI, CH G1 526, CH-1015 Lausanne, Switzerland
E-mail: michael.graetzel@epfl.ch
d
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Mail Stop 90-3027D, Berkeley, USA
E-mail: R_Kostecki@lbl.gov
e
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Mail Stop 70-108B, and Department of Mechanical Engineering, University of California at Berkeley, Berkeley, USA
E-mail: ssmao@lbl.gov
Chem. Soc. Rev., 2012,41, 7909-7937
DOI:
10.1039/C2CS35230C
Received
31 Aug 2011,
First published online
18 Sep 2012
Over the past decades, there have been many projections on the future depletion of the fossil fuel reserves on earth as well as the rapid increase in green-house gas emissions. There is clearly an urgent need for the development of renewable energy technologies. On a different frontier, growth and manipulation of materials on the nanometer scale have progressed at a fast pace. Selected recent and significant advances in the development of nanomaterials for renewable energy applications are reviewed here, and special emphases are given to the studies of solar-driven photocatalytic hydrogen production, electricity generation with dye-sensitized solar cells, solid-state hydrogen storage, and electric energy storage with lithium ion rechargeable batteries.
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