New carbon dioxide to methane conversion offers energy savings

Nov 26 2024


By employing nickel atoms laid out on an electrified surface, an Ohio State University team was able to directly convert carbamate, the captured form of carbon dioxide, to methane.

Chemists have developed a novel way to capture and convert carbon dioxide into methane, suggesting that future gas emissions could be converted into an alternative fuel using electricity from renewable sources. 

Using a special nickel-based catalyst, the researchers turned captured carbon dioxide directly into methane according to Tomaz Neves-Garcia, lead author of the study and a current postdoctoral researcher in chemistry and biochemistry at The Ohio State University. They found that nickel atoms, a cheap and widely available catalyst, were extremely good at making this conversion.

 

Tomaz Neves-Garcia
Tomaz Neves-Garcia

 

“We are going from a molecule that has low energy and producing from it a fuel that has high energy,” said Neves-Garcia. “What makes this so interesting is that others capture, recover and then convert carbon dioxide in steps, while we save energy by doing these steps simultaneously.” 

Most importantly, streamlining the carbon capture process helps reframe what scientists know about the carbon cycle, and is a vital step to setting up more complex strategies for faster and more efficient climate mitigation technologies. 

“We need to focus on spending the lowest energy possible for carbon capture and conversion,” said Neves-Garcia. “So instead of performing all the capture and conversion steps independently, we can combine it in a single step, bypassing wasteful energy processes.”   

The paper was recently published in the Journal of the American Chemical Society. 

Although many carbon capture methods are still in their early stages, with researchers from an array of fields working to improve them, the field is a promising one, said Neves-Garcia. 

Converting CO2 into a fuel using renewable electricity has the potential to close the carbon cycle. For example, when methane is burned to generate energy, it emits carbon dioxide, which, if captured and converted back to methane, could lead to a continuous cycle of energy production without adding to Earth’s global warming burden.  

The study also represents the first time that researchers discovered they could use electrochemistry to achieve carbamate conversion to methane. Although many attempts have been made to convert captured CO2 into useful products, until now most researchers have only shown the ability to produce carbon monoxide. 

“Methane can be a really interesting product, but the most important thing is that this opens a path to develop more processes to convert captured CO2  into other products,” he said. 

Moving forward, the team expects to keep exploring other chemical clean energy alternatives to help inspire the creation of a variety of sustainable carbon capture routes. 

“Everything always goes back to energy, and there’s a lot of excitement and effort invested in the future of this field to save more of it,” said Neves-Garcia. 

Other co-authors include Quansong Zhu and L. Robert Baker from Ohio State, Liane M. Rossi from the University of Sao Paulo, Mahmudul Hasan and Robert E. Warburton from Case Western Reserve University, Jing Li and Hailiang Wang from Yale University, as well as Zhan Jiang and Yongye Liang from the Southern University of Science and Technology.

Read the paper
Ohio State University


Previous: Block Energy begins Phase 2 CO2 storage studies in Georgia

Next: Levidian launches new LOOP tech for producing graphene from methane







Issue 110 - Mar - Apr 2026

CCUS in the U.S.: Texas carbon management Roadmap .. Webinar report: project updates from Tenaska, Geostock Sandia and Vault 44.01 .. ExxonMobil’s second project in Louisiana Consortium advances UK integrated CCS shipping facility .. Xodus: Carbon c.....