Hello you all,
I just read that, as catalysts must have a big surface but then light for photo-catalysis gets difficult to bring to them, a research group puts nanoparticles of catalyst on a foam, said foam keeping the resulting material aerial enough to allow the activating light reach everywhere.
I feel this is improvable.
Imagine an optical fibre channelling the activating light: it's thin and can be very long, so it brings much surface in little volume, and can be winded, crumpled or woven to compact dimensions. By putting the catalyst at its surface, it gets the activating light, for instance through fading waves, or because catalyst particles make the fibre cladding thinner where they adhere.
If the reaction medium is a gas, light will stay naturally in the fibre. If it's a liquid, whose index may exceed the fibre core's index, the lower-index cladding should be made thicker to limit light losses.
If the reactants need light but no solid catalyst, and are opaque, the optics fibre is also a way to bring light through the fading wave to a large volume, without a catalyst.
As an example or form, one (or more) long fibre is winded on a hollow mandrel consisting of several parallel struts. Tiny spacing between the turns is achieved directly by winding precision, or by co-winding a spacing wire that is subsequently removed, or by tiny notches machined in the struts. The reactants and products can then flow from the inner to the outer of the quasi-cylinder made of optics fibre. Several layers of winding are feasible as well; they were produced with a spacing, a long time ago, of copper wire for radio receiver coils.
Marc Schaefer, aka Enthalpy