VUB researchers pave the way for solar fuels from CO₂

VUB researchers pave the way for solar fuels from CO₂

New research shows how inexpensive, safe materials can directly convert sunlight into sustainable fuels.

Researchers at the Vrije Universiteit Brussel (VUB), in collaboration with Stanford University, Antwerp University and Hasselt University, have achieved a major breakthrough in the development of sustainable materials for the production of solar fuels. The research was conducted by Dr. Beatriz de la Fuente within the SUME (Sustainable Materials Engineering) group, and the team of professors Tom Hauffman and Annick Hubin. The team has demonstrated that inexpensive, non-toxic and earth abundant materials can be used to turn sunlight and CO₂ into sustainable fuels.

The study shows how certain materials, known as semiconductors, can be made more efficient in systems that directly convert solar energy into chemical energy. By better understanding and improving these materials, the team succeeded in making them both more durable and more powerful. They discovered how the energy within the materials interacts with the electrodes, how charges move across the system, and what factors affect long-term stability. The researchers also found that adding special catalysts further boosts performance and extends the lifetime of the systems.

This progress brings us closer to a future where CO₂—today one of the biggest drivers of climate change—can be reused as a raw material for fuel production. In the short term, the research delivers new knowledge that will support the development of clean, affordable energy technologies. In the long term, these systems could evolve into decentralized units that produce solar fuels, contributing to energy independence, green innovation, and achieving climate targets.

“Our findings show that it is possible to build solar fuel systems with abundant, environmentally friendly materials that are both efficient and sustainable,” says Beatriz de la Fuente. “This is a crucial step in turning CO₂ from a problem into a valuable resource.”

With this research, VUB confirms its leading role in sustainable and innovative energy technologies.

This collaboration was made possible thanks to funding support from the Research Foundation ​ Flanders (FWO) and it was conducted within a highly collaborative academic–industrial ecosystem. It forms part of SYNCAT (SYNergetic Design of CATalytic Materials for Integrated Photoand Electrochemical CO2 Conversion Processes), a multi-university project supported by the Flemish Moonshot Initiative (Strategic Basic Research for Clusters), funded by VLAIO.

 

Reference:

Beatriz de la Fuente, Daniely Reis Santos, Irene Dei Tos, Bart Ruttens, Jan D’Haen, Sudhanshu Shukla, Bart Vermang, Juliet Risner-Jamtgaard, Annick Hubin, and Tom Hauffman (2025) Probing the Electronic Band Structure of Emerging Chalcogenide Absorbers for Photoelectrochemistry. The Journal of Physical Chemistry C 129 (44), 20015-20024 DOI: 10.1021/acs.jpcc.5c05834

 


Contact voor pers:

Beatriz de la Fuente Pérez: beatriz.de.la.fuente.perez@vub.be, +32498035241

Prof. Tom Hauffman: Tom.Hauffman@vub.be, +3226293538

Prof. Annick Hubin: Annick.Hubin@vub.be, +32478623344

Koen Stein
Koen Stein Perscontact wetenschap & onderzoek

 

 

 

 

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