Power Generation With Nanotubes 40
NubKnacker writes "Business World is carrying an article about how an Indian scientiest at IIT, Bangalore has come up with a new innovative method to produce power by blowing gases over carbon nanotubes. The underlying physics of the idea is quite simple yet no one had thought of it until today."
Very cool, related story in Nature (Score:5, Interesting)
From the Nature article:
Now, I'm definitely no physicist so please pardon my ignorance--maybe someone can help me out. Does this mean that the temperature differential created on the carbon nanotube wire that causes the current to flow won't ever reach equilibrium? Doesn't this seem too good to be true? Just keep blowing gas over the wire, and you'll have limitless energy.
Re:Very cool, related story in Nature (Score:5, Informative)
Gedanken experiment:
You have two tanks of air at equal pressure, and a nanotube setup like the one described in the article in the valve connecting the two tanks. You open the valve - and no air moves across the nanotube, since the tanks are at equal pressure. Now, you pump air from tank 1 to tank 2, and the nanotube will generate energy - but only an equal or lesser amount of energy than it took to pump the air across the tanks.
Re:Very cool, related story in Nature (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Very cool, related story in Nature (Score:1)
Since windmills are so popular, couldn't we use them to inflate a balloon at the bottom of one tank and cause pressure to start the flow. Then release the balloon which would reverse the flow (and still generate current, from what I understand) then repeat?
I just know that in some areas of the world, wind is a more steady source of power than solar.
Re:Very cool, related story in Nature (Score:3, Insightful)
Mechanical work (wind-power, hydroelectric, bicycle generator, regenerative braking) is already a low-entropy source... it's easy to capture it, and while it can't be lossless we have techniques that can generally come pretty close to the theoretical values for capturing it.
(which doesn't mean it can't be better, lighter, cheaper - but they're basically pretty good)
A pressure differential is somewhat worse - and a heat source (solar heating, gasoline, diesel, natural gas, coal, heating oil..
Re:Very cool, related story in Nature (Score:4, Interesting)
I haven't read the article (I'm not that new here), but if there was an issue with the direction of flow, a simple system with 2 bi-directional valves and a little extra pipe could guarantee the gas flowed in a given direction that section of pipe, regardless of which tank was the source and which was the destination.
Re:Very cool, related story in Nature (Score:2)
The net yield from solar energy is not that great and there are huge infrastucture costs involved. As long as oil, coal and nukes work, there's no incentive to change. Chicken Little doomsaying by the radical environmentalists only hurts their position, but hey, everyone needs a job.
Re:Very cool, related story in Nature (Score:2)
Re:Very cool, related story in Nature (Score:2)
Sure, but what is the cost of getting that technology into place? Current solar panels are expensive and easily damaged and can only work effectively in certain areas. I agree that the efficiency is going up but it's not at a pace that it can compete with current power generation technologies within the next 30 years.
The US uses coal as the main generator of electricity and that can be cleaned-up by oxygenation. Nukes are also a good option, but since privatization of the power industries tends to create
Re:Very cool, related story in Nature (Score:2)
Re:Very cool, related story in Nature (Score:2)
Tidal power interests me (since it tends to involve pipes
If done properly, nucular is safe but you wouldn't want Homer Simpson as an operator. I don't see where cancer comes into the matter.
Probably the best overall solution for power generation is hydroelectricity as is used in Quebec. However, the manpower and dedication needed to create this (not to mention the required geogr
Re:Very cool, related story in Nature (Score:2)
Not very reliable. Of course if they just ignored the whale the plant wouldn't be down.
Re:Very cool, related story in Nature (Score:2)
Re:Very cool, related story in Nature (Score:2)
Kind of like an afterburner on the power plant...these could be placed inline after the turbines and generate an extra kick. Plus, that energy is basically "free" since the stored energy comes from its position in the earth, presumably energy that was placed there through natural, renewable processes (as opposed, say, to pumping it up the side of
Re:Very cool, related story in Nature (Score:1, Insightful)
Except in order to generate power the wires have to put a drag on the gas flow. That drag puts drag on the turbines and probably costs more than it produces.
Re:Very cool, related story in Nature (Score:2)
Re:Very cool, related story in Nature (Score:2)
No.. see, they're referring to something different here. That without any gas flow or anything, there can be a temperature difference on a nanotube which doesn't reach equillibrium. Now that is something which is remarkable, because it seems to violate
Cost prohibitive for non-sensing applications (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Cost prohibitive for non-sensing applications (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Cost prohibitive for non-sensing applications (Score:2)
Re:Cost prohibitive for non-sensing applications (Score:1)
As I pointed out in the quotation from the article in question, the effect has been demonstrated by the same researcher using other materials than nanotubes -- materials that are already common, readily available and much more robust than nanotubes. Given that fact, amply explained in the article as I quoted originally, I see far less reason than you to be pessimistic about this effect seeing commerc
SCO will be saved! (Score:4, Funny)
Efficiency? (Score:2, Interesting)
That was amazing. (Score:3, Interesting)
Seriously, the potential applications to this just for minute gas-flow sensing are astounding; if this were ever exploited for consumer energy..... I think the guy deserves a Nobel prize for it.
Re:That was amazing. (Score:2)
Maybe you didn't think of it...
I did.
But, you know, I've been like... busy, and stuff.
IISc and not IIT (Score:3, Informative)
Re:IISc and not IIT (Score:1)
How was this "unknown"? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:How was this "unknown"? (Score:5, Insightful)
Think of it this way:
We knew about peanutbutter. We knew about chocolate. We knew they both taste good. But we didn't know they tasted so damn good together until they came out with Reese's Peanutbutter Cups. Thank you Mr. Reese, whomever you are.
Re:How was this "unknown"? (Score:2)
Well then I'd like to submit, for the approval of the science community, my method of power generation by ice cube and Zippo lighter.
Cows? (Score:1)
> blowing gases
Methane perhaps? Cow farts??
It's IISc. Not IIT (Score:1)
This has been done... (Score:2)
How is this dis-similar from a hot wire anemometer?
Caption (Score:4, Funny)
Well... that's a lab I wouldn't want to work in.
Lower your shields (Score:2, Interesting)