Efficient Solar Power Using Stirling Engines 146
tscola writes "The EE Times is reporting that the U.S. Energy department believes it can make solar collectors that generate electricity at efficiency levels that rival other methods. Instead of using photovoltaics, they want to use Stirling engines to convert the heat of the sun into electricity."
pictures (Score:5, Informative)
Farms? (Score:1)
Re:Farms? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Farms? (Score:4, Informative)
But realistically, these probably don't need to be built in a huge farm someplace. You could conceivably stick two or five of them on top of buildings, float a dozen of them on barges anchored in a reservoir, etc., and built the network piecemeal.
If they really are valuable enough, it probably wouldn't be hard to find space for them in open space in Europe: someplace in Spain might be found, even if some amount of agriculture might need to be displaced for the installation. Or you could contract out to some relatively stable country in the Middle East to house them.
If they're chiefly used to generate hydrogen they might be very useful to install in Northern Africa; hydrogen tankers could carry the energy to Europe.
Re:Farms? (Score:2)
And we'll contract elves to run them and fairies to clean the mirrors!
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Re:Farms? (Score:2)
Check out the energy it takes to put a Kg of material in orbit. Now calculate how light those mirrors would need to be to repay the energy of orbit within 10 years. Yup - those are some pretty thin mirrors.
This concept only works on the moon with local materials.
Re:Farms? (Score:2)
the poor folks in Europe don't have the room
but the rich certainly have plenty of land sitting idly by
5 individuals in the UK receive £BILLIONs of farming subsidy per year between them for leaving their vast lands fallow.
It would probably work poorly in Europe anyway (Score:3, Informative)
Re:It would probably work poorly in Europe anyway (Score:2)
Although you are correct, it should be noted that an overcast sky provides around 10% of the light intensity in watts per square meter compared to direct sunlight. So if you have a system that works equally well for diffuse as for direct sunlight, and direct sunlight is available 50% of the (day) time, then 90% of the produced electricity will be from the hours with direct sunlight anyway.
Hence, in this e
Yes, but what's the relative value of that energy? (Score:2)
Why so big scale? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Why so big scale? (Score:5, Funny)
You mean,like if, say, 6 dishes could power about 40 homes?
Re:Why so big scale? (Score:3, Insightful)
Why not make it easy for everyone to have in his home?
Simple: It would be more difficult to tax.
Re:Why so big scale? (Score:2)
Re:Why so big scale? (Score:4, Informative)
=Smidge=
Re:Why so big scale? (Score:2)
Re:Why so big scale? (Score:3, Informative)
Those things are anything BUT efficent. They are just very delicate and carefully constructed so they don't need much to run. Remember Carnot efficiency is 1-(Th/Tc)
=Smidge=
Re:Infrastructure (Score:2)
Depends on how you do all this. If you have a solar cell, you are producing DC, and all the circuits to turn it into AC at the right frequency is duplicated for each house. For a stirling engine it is much simpler, just connect the stirling engine to a standard synchronous motor, and connect them to the grid. Synchronous motors become generaters when driven faster than their run RPM. Remove the AC input and they output no current. (I'd still want some safety equipment, and you might want to clean the p
Close, but not there yet (Score:3, Informative)
I am not saying that this isn't a worthwhile discovery, just that I don't see much in the market that is going to push to adopt this technology other then governments wanting to use something that is cleaner then coal. Oil is good stuff because you can throw it into a car and have it run. The real technology that is going to make solar cells like these worthwhile and get the market onboard would be cheap hydrogen fuel cells you can stuff into a car. Charge up a cheap fuel cell with one of these solar cells, ratchet up the price of gas some more, and now you are talking about cleaner cars and the ability to care about the Middle East about as much as the US cares about Africa (which is to say almost not at all).
The only other two real problems I see is that first; in the north I imagine that the cost per kilowatt hour is much more expensive. I imagine a few feet of snow and -30 F temperatures render these things pretty useless. Second, to power a place like LA I imagine you would need a massive bank of these things. I wonder if a massive bank of these would have an effect upon the environment or the weather patterns in a noticeable way. That said, I suppose if you just throw them all in a desert no one is going to care.
So, neat technology, but I don't expect an energy revolution over night.
Re:Close, but not there yet (Score:5, Informative)
Snow might do it, but -30F certainly should not, quite the opposite. The engine operates on temperature difference. Thermally isolating the "hot side" is relatively easy, so colder it is at the "cool side" the better. Of course extreme cold could make lubrication etc more difficult, but any temperature current automobile engines handle should be just fine for stirling engine too in that respect.
Re:Close, but not there yet (Score:2)
Re:Close, but not there yet (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Close, but not there yet (Score:2)
Re:Close, but not there yet (Score:2)
perhaps you didn't see this article [slashdot.org] on electric cars
Re:Close, but not there yet (Score:2)
To replace oil with solar, you need batteries (Score:2)
I addressed pretty much the same issue in this essay on my blog [blogspot.com].
Misleading - Coal isn't "cheap" (Score:5, Interesting)
While it would be nice to get away from coal, there are two things stopping this. First, coal is cheap. Second, in recent years they have done a pretty solid job at cleaning up the health risks associated with coal.
First, coal is not cheap. The price is low because the mining and electricity corporations export every cost they can get away with onto the public at large. Mountaintop removal/valley fill mining practices illegally destroy thousands of acres of Appalachian hardwood forests and hundreds of miles of streams. Electricity generation plants dump millions of tons of CO2 into the atmosphere altering its composition with unpredictable consequences, create acid fog and rain that destroy forests, lakes, and streams, and dump hundreds of pounds of mercury into the environment where it ends up damaging our brains. If mining and generating corporations were forced to be good citizens and not force us to surreptitiously pay for their products' hidden costs then other energy sources would be economically competitive. Instead, they prefer to stuff pennies into the fuse boxes of capitalism and bitchslap any more responsible initiatives with their ill-gotten capital.
Second, BWAH HAH HAH HAH. That would be hilarious about the "pretty solid job at cleaning up the health risks" if it weren't so tragic what is happening. Granted, they are better than they used to be, but those gains come from laws passed in the '70s and '80s which are being rolled back now. (See the "Clear Skies Initiative")
Re:Misleading - Coal isn't "cheap" (Score:2)
Woah, not only is coal cheap, it's a bargin! Can you imagine how much it would cost to illegally destroy thousands of acres of Appalachian hardwood forests and hundreds of miles of streams?
And they do it free of charge!
Re:Misleading - Coal isn't "cheap" (Score:2)
Woah, not only is coal cheap, it's a bargin! Can you imagine how much it would cost to illegally destroy thousands of acres of Appalachian hardwood forests and hundreds of miles of streams?
Uhh, I don't have to imagine how much it would cost. It's done every day and that cost is rolled into the product. It's actually much cheaper to mine this way than to use underground or traditional strip mining because large machinery can replace a hoard of miners. Even when you include the cost of purchasing state
How many mechanics needed (Score:1)
Re:How many mechanics needed (Score:4, Informative)
Stirling engines are mechanically extremely simple, low-RPM and low-vibration. I'd expect the mechanical parts to last "forever", considerng how long ball bearings, cam shafts etc of even cheap automobile engines last (excluding manufacturing defects etc) in much more hostile environment. There's really surprisingly little wear under low loads, and stirling engines only have low loads.
Re:How many mechanics needed (Score:2)
If they decided they would last 50 years with no maintenance in arriving at 6.5c/kWh then they might well be in for a shock!
Re:How many mechanics needed (Score:2)
Stirling engines may be simple, but there's more to these units. Since the entire unit swings around following the sun, you can bet that keeping everything properly lubricated will be important. The motors that control the positioning of the unit are going to require servicing as well. Not to mention the occasional washing/polishing of the mirrors to keep them up to spec.
But it's not like conventional power plants don't employ hordes of mechanics as well. I'm sure it's all been factored in already.
Re:How many mechanics needed (Score:2)
Re:How many mechanics needed (Score:2)
One of the issues they have is startup energy (Score:4, Interesting)
"Since each dish draws about 10 amps from the power grid for a few milliseconds when it starts up in the morning, startup must be staggered if a large dish farm is to avoid causing a blackout."
Question:
Why not add a fuel cell or battery to each dish that would be charged as needed during operation for use as a starter?
This would enable each dish to start up under it's own power without affecting the grid at all... and for a very small price in terms of daily output.
Any reason why not?
Re:One of the issues they have is startup energy (Score:3, Insightful)
Any reason why not?
Assuming that the guys designing this stuff aren't total idiots, rest assured that they looked into something like your proposal. Apparently they came to the solution that using grid power and software to control the staggered startup is cheaper than adding a battery to each dish.
Re:One of the issues they have is startup energy (Score:2)
Essentially the big upside to using stored energy for startup rather than pulling from the grid is that if one of the 20,000 or 100,000 or even ten of these dishes doesn't start up on any given day, big whoop... send a crew out to swap a component or two,
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Grid transients in general are an issue (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Grid transients in general are an issue (Score:2)
Simply? It's not simple. (Score:2)
According to what I've read about grid regulation, it's not uncommon to have the slower-reacting plants ramping in one direction to follow the general trend while the fast-reacting p
Re:Simply? It's not simple. (Score:2)
Large scale hydroelectric installations with dams are easy to throttle as well... the reservoir = a big battery. My company is a major hydro investor (one of the biggest in N. America) and most of our dams have 30 days of full power behind them and turbines can be brought on-line or taken off-line very quickly. That is plenty to smooth out daily and weekly cycles.
These heliostat type stirling engines use a at least one
Re:Simply? It's not simple. (Score:2)
How do you manage this outside of the west, where there are few hydro installations? Even there, how do you manage this while also allowing the river to have its normal seasonal cycles instead of weekday surges as our demand produces?
Two things to make you doubt that conclusion:
Or just don't send that power out all at once (Score:3, Interesting)
There is a complete non-issue about how to cut in this power source (compared to any other kind of generator).
How not to "waste" the power generated when you aren't cut in is a "what to do with the gravy" kind of issue fo
Storage is neither easy nor cheap (Score:2)
Nope. As implied by the article, the engines are tied to synchronous alternators. These will generate at a few hundred volts (such small units do not have the physical size for the insulation needed for high voltages). Conversion to high-tension is done with transformers; there is no storage.
Eve
Re:Storage is neither easy nor cheap (Score:2)
"From 2007 to 2010, the program proposes mass-producing dishes to create a 20,000-dish farm supplying 230,000 V of long-haul power from its own substation directly connected to the grid."
This was the point at which the whole rising power thing becomes an issue in terms of a sustained, steadily increasing supply.
Re:Storage is neither easy nor cheap (Score:2)
Talk about irony. I read it, and I know what it says. I also know what it does not say that I would demand to know before making technical decisions about this scheme, and it's a lot.
See that "Engineer" in my moniker? It's not just for show.
Don't be silly. You can put power on the grid with a couple of solar panels and a synchronous inv
Re:Storage is neither easy nor cheap (Score:2)
Re:Storage is neither easy nor cheap (Score:2)
http://library.abb.com/GLOBAL/SCOT/SCOT289.nsf/ V er ityDisplay/29D24AC36EEACC6A85256D2E003F2E6E/$File/ WindPanelPaperPart2.pdf
Granted, with wind, the rate-of-change and frequency-of-change is more substantial compared to the sterling engine system (just because of persistence of heat compared to wind etc).
This was found with a quick google, so it may be less than perfect as a reference.
But section III-B sounds very like th
There's only one thing I want to know right now (Score:2)
Re:One of the issues they have is startup energy (Score:3, Informative)
Actually a cheaper solution (than batteries) for a startup current is to use something called an "ultra capacitor". They charge up faster, last longer, and can provide very high currents for short durations.
Here is one manufacturer's ultra capacitor FAQ: Maxwell Technologies FAQ [maxwell.com]
Re:One of the issues they have is startup energy (Score:2)
Why not add a fuel cell or battery to each dish that would be charged as needed during operation for use as a starter?
It would be better to just wind up a clockwork spring and use that to restart the engine. That way you don't lose as much energy to conversion.
Re:One of the issues they have is startup energy (Score:2)
Re:One of the issues they have is startup energy (Score:3, Insightful)
Two reasons:
Re:One of the issues they have is startup energy (Score:2)
#1 reason... maybe I misread the article. I thought the problem was the draw on the system, not the load it would create by generating more power... that's a problem for any hi
Re:One of the issues they have is startup energy (Score:2)
Re:One of the issues they have is startup energy (Score:2)
These are the requirements.... if you use a battery store for the startup energy needed you can do it the way you describe. Pulling
Re:One of the issues they have is startup energy (Score:2)
These things are going to feed the existing 60 Hz power grid, that means 60 Hz is available to the system. 60Hz Ac changes polarity every 0.0166 seconds; so turn on one drive every half cycle. You are just not seeing this as something relatively simple, turning on electric motors at a particular time isn't rocket science, doesn't need real time OSes or anything like that.
Syncing electric alternators is not hard, in fact it
Re:One of the issues they have is startup energy (Score:2)
Re:One of the issues they have is startup energy (Score:2)
Real time software isn't cheap and this would have to control hardware to within milliseconds to avoid causing an escalation problem that
Re:One of the issues they have is startup energy (Score:2)
Did you know that a standard AA battery can deliver 10 AMPs over a very short period of time? If all these things need is a few milliseconds of this amount of energy to kickstart.. I'm thinking one of the other posts that mentioned a capacitor might be just about right as long as it can hold it's charge over nigh
Re:One of the issues they have is startup energy (Score:2)
You know the more I think about it the more I feel the world is realy coming to an end; first the British outlaw fox hunting, then I defend a technic to will reduce green-house gasses, step three must be the end of the world.
How Stirling Engines Work (Score:5, Informative)
Here's a great little intro to Sterling Engines [howstuffworks.com], for those who have never heard of one.
Re:How Stirling Engines Work (Score:2)
Re:How Stirling Engines Work (Score:2)
With stirling engines this would not be practical. And this has at least two drawbacks:
1. less efficient since energy *always* has to be converted to electricity first
2. more power (==cost, weight etc) is needed from electric motors a
Re:How Stirling Engines Work (Score:2)
I believe Stirlings have been proposed for cars, but they need a long warmup time to get to full efficiency.
On the other hand, using Stirlings as auxiliary power is intriguing. I can see using them in combination with photoelectric cells. The photoelectric cells generate electricity, leaving about 90% of the energy untouched as heat; the Stirlings tap that heat and generate more energy.
Who says a solution has to be all-or nothing?
Dean Kamen (Score:2)
Why yes, he was [stirlingengine.com].
I hope he is working on this solar project (or one like it). He could certainly sort out the remaining issues.
Flywheels instead of hydrogen cells? (Score:2)
I would think that flywheels [wikipedia.org] would be a more appropriate way to store power for the night-time use. Hydrogen fuel cell has become a a buzzword, and I wonder if that was thrown in there because no alternative power sounds cool unless it deals with hydrogen and cars. (Although the EE times is v
Re:Flywheels instead of hydrogen cells? (Score:2)
Re:Flywheels instead of hydrogen cells? (Score:2, Interesting)
You ever try to mount a flywheel? Some of the old mainframe disk drives needed a special foundation because if left loose they would move in relation to the earths rotation. Enough energy in flywheels to run the US overnight? I think you would push the earth off orbit if you tried it.
I'm not sure if this is funny or insightful. Anyone care to do the physics?
Re:Flywheels instead of hydrogen cells? (Score:5, Informative)
Flywheel batteries (for lack of a better term) are designed to be free-floating within their housings. Its much easier to let the thing precess then try to tie it down. This doesn't work for disk drives because you need the heads in contact with the drives. For a flywheel, you don't need anything to be in contact, so you can let the axis move around as it likes. (You do energy transfers using magnetic fields.)
Regarding the energy of the spinning earth. First, any change you made to the earth's spin by energizing the fly-wheels, you would get back when you took the energy back out (minus friction of course). So you're not really affecting the total energy much.
Second, you clearly are not understanding the magnitude of energy we're talking about in the earth's rotation. If you could siphon energy from the earth's rotation, you could power the whole U.S. for 1.4 million _years_ and only change the length of a day by 1 second.
Re:Flywheels instead of hydrogen cells? (Score:2)
Land prices always kill this... (Score:3, Interesting)
In the case of other power technologies, the land use is relatively concentrated. Mines, transport routes, powerplants, refineries, etc. don't take up nearly as much space. In a number of cases the land surface can be used for dual purposes, as in ranging cattle on scrub land sitting on top of an oil patch, or growing crops on reclaim land.
There is cheap land available for this, but it's often located some distance from the use points, and energy doesn't store well and transport is expensive. Figure in the TCO of building that intertie to your solar farm in the middle of nowhere, and the pickings start looking a lot smaller.
Re:Land prices always kill this... (Score:5, Insightful)
You have to figure the cost of the real estate these items sit on, versus what other purposes the land could be used for.
In the case of other power technologies, the land use is relatively concentrated. Mines, transport routes, powerplants, refineries, etc. don't take up nearly as much space.
If the corporations profiting from fossil fuels were required to pay the real estate costs for the production of their products then solar would come out way ahead.
Hundreds of miles of streams have been burried by mountaintop removal/valley fill coal mining (no charge) -- Thousands of acres of lakes and rivers mangled by acid rain (no charge) -- Millions of acres of forests damaged by acid rain (no charge) -- Thousands of miles of streams and millions of acres of ocean polluted with mercury (no charge) -- All the air on the planet altered in compostion by CO2 exaust with unpredictable consequences (no charge)
They get away with it because we let them. We want "cheap" energy but we only get it by ignoring the real costs.
Re:Land prices always kill this... (Score:2, Informative)
Well, 10,000 square miles is 6.4 million acres.
There are 7.8 million acres of coal mines currently under permit. This 7.8 million excludes over 2 million acres of old mines which have been reclaimed. Note that reclaimed mine land is not the same as being in pristine condition.
The 7.8 million also excludes down-stream/down-river areas which may be impacted by run-off from mine waste rock and tailings.
So, its not as good a comparison as I originally thought, but the land needs are actually pretty
What effect of sun blockage to 6,400,000 acres? (Score:2)
Electrical power transport and intertie are efficient when looked at from a technical basis. Well-designed modern power transmission systems only lose a small percentage of energy during transmission, but after you add up the infrastructure maintenance costs, right-of-way, aquisition and de
Re:What effect of sun blockage to 6,400,000 acres? (Score:2)
Seriously, imagine buying up a chunk of the Mojave desert. It won't be expensive (except that the government owns it all, but that's another issue). Then you use this to cool it by 20-30 degrees. Now you can live there without running the air conditioning 24/7/365, you have all the energy you need, and you sell off the re
Eh... not so much... (Score:4, Insightful)
We arn't reflecting the heat off into space (a la snow-cover), we are reflecting it to a heat sink about 20 feet off the ground.
The heat passes through that heat-sink and into the air. The air temprature will probably *rise* during the day because the ground isn't soaking it up _directly_. Any given square-inch of ground will be in shdow for about two extra hours a day per dish (wild-ass geuss from just looking at the thing) and will be subject to the shadows of three dishes max. So any given square inch will be "shaded" for half the day.
A good bit of that heat will get back into the ground anyway.
The net environmental impact would be about the same as for sparse tree cover (But without the water use and with a dissimilar habatat provision).
Soil water retention would go up just a tiny bit.
The most liekly impact woudl be changes in midle-size air masses within a range of about
So worst case, (total wog again here) about the same climatological impact as if say one-third the same area were covered with "water that couldn't evaporate" or concrete sculptures of trees.
A similar area covered with buildings would probably be worse in general. It would be the classic "downtown effect" (where it is hotter downtown during the day and colder downtown at night).
Something that I have mentioned before... (Score:4, Interesting)
One such design, which some of you here are familiar with, is known as an "OTEC" - or "Ocean Thermal Energy Conversion". Pushed greatly by the book "The Millenium Project" - OTECs are devices, sitting on ocean-based platforms, which use the thermal gradients in the ocean at different depths to drive a Stirling-type engine which runs a generator to generate electricity (for a variety of uses in the book). These are actual devices, which have been built and tested (I am not sure if they are in real production or not). This is a very interesting use of stored (in the ocean) solar energy - the amount of energy taken out by OTECs would be miniscule, and would very likely not cause harm to flora and fauna (the ocean is HUGE).
On a similar note, I have, in the past, proposed here on Slashdot the idea of a "reverse OTEC" - which I proposed for be called a DTEC/GTEC/TTEC, for "Desert Thermal Energy Conversion" (or, alternatively, "Ground"/"Terra"). The idea being that we use the energy differential that exists between a few inches under the soil (hot side), and several feet down (cold side). Alternatively, we could bury the "hot" side of the collector in the concrete/asphault that makes up our roadways and parking lots (as well as place them on roofs). We could then gain heat from the sun, increasing the temperature differential (in the winter, when the ground is frozen in some areas - or at night, when surface temperatures drop, these engines would still work - the temperature gradient is still there, just smaller (or inverted in the winter) and not as large).
Using Sterling engine technology in this way helps to offset the "land use" argument - your land actually becomes more valuable, because not only does it provide parking or roads, but energy as well! The tradeoff being that road/parking lot construction and repair would become waaay more complicated, and probably more expensive. These issues would need to be studied. It could very well be that the economics don't work out for this and other reasons. Perhaps the issue then is to design better roadways and parking lots that don't fall apart in a few years, and instead last for a very long time (so you don't have to repair them as often).
I think such a design for Stirling engine use, coupled with more traditional solar heat panels (to drive the Stirlings as well), where they can be used (perhaps putting the panels on the rooftops would be better?) could easily help supplement the energy usage needs of many large urban sites, like malls and office complexes, as well as possibly neighborhoods.
Re:Something that I have mentioned before... (Score:2)
Re:Something that I have mentioned before... (Score:2)
Space issues (Score:2)
This same concern is brought up everytime wind power is discussed. Why not combine the two? Place win farms and these new "solar farms" together? YOu could create a much higher power creating density using such a method.
This exact technology was tried in 1982 (Score:2)
Some background is here. [crest.org] "Ken Stone discussed how the United Stirling engine and parabolic dish system was taken out of moth balls an
Anyone do the math? (Score:2)
According to the DOE report "Total net generation of electric power in August 2004 was 366.3 terawatthours"
Just for August!
So, Google says 11 square miles is 28,489,869.2 square meters.
So it's 366,300,000,000 watt hours, divided by 28,489,869.2 sq meters = 12,857 watthours per square meter for the month of August.
Checking the Naval obserivitory data, it there's about 13.5 average hours of sunlight in August.
Dang, at this point I'm stumped. I figure we would put these in the best spot in the US, New Mex
Re:where's the... (Score:4, Informative)
By storing the energy in hydrogen fuel cells during the day, Stirling solar-dish farms could supply U.S. electrical-energy needs at night too, as well as enough juice for future fuel-cell-powered automobiles, the DOE believes.
Re:where's the... (Score:3, Insightful)
So, they're arguing around the limitations of the system by promising another completely different undeveloped system? I call bullshit.
If you wanted to store energy, the best way that's actually developed and in use would be to pump water up into a rese
Still no RTFA? (Score:4, Interesting)
They discus the economies of scale (somewhat) by talking first about the "daytime only" nature of the power, and by _coincidence_ the fact that daytime is peak power demand time, where near-term provision will do a lot of good.
The blockquoted text is part of an "not addressed at this time" conjecture. Just liek the part where they talk about a "100 square mile generation system" not as if they are proposing one be built, but as if they were trying to convey the issues of scale and return.
At least it was clear to me when I read the article, and appreciated the "dumbed down explinations" presented, that they were trying to get effecient solar power working instead of wrapping themselves around the *POINTLESS* axle of "what about at night?".
As for the pumping water up a hill (e.g. the "gravity battery" of potential energy) I think you over-estimate the effecency of hydro-power rather a bit as well. Granted the elements are well understood, but I don't think you get the whole "pump head" issue of volume vs lift vs return potential very clearly, otherwise you would not imagine for a moment that the driect mechanical output of the systems in question were "well suted" to running the kinds of pumps you'd need, just because the striling enginges turn and so do pumps.
(_Directly_ using the mechanical energy of the small Stirling Engines to move "enough" water high "enough" to be useful in filling a resivour big "enough" to turn meaningfully sized turbans or water wheels to generate "enough" nightime electricity is a laughable debacle _before_ you consider laminar flow resistance (rising and falling), evaporation loss, pump maintenance (clogging), seeapage loss, providing source water in the first place, simple acreage or water-tower shadows, and so forth.)
The fact remains that cutting N% off our fossil fuel and polution problems is pretty much a win of N%. If we could replace 50% of the runtime on the nations fill-in generators, that would be *huge*. _TEN_ percent would be huge too.
The article and the investigators are trying to solve *their* part, what are you trying to solve by bitching about their off-hand mention of hydrogen?
The fact remains that the "energy storage" problem remians no matter what the generation system. "Batteries" for electric cars, holding solar, wind, or tidal power for return when those are not at peak. That sort of thing will remain no matter what.
The "don't bother with solar until you solve the nightime issues" frame of mind is defeatest as hell and so not terribly useful.
I suspect, were I to have to prognosticate, that we will need to revive nuclear power. Invent better batteries/fuel cells, look into _sonic_ (as opposed to electical) separation of water into hydrogen and oxygen [very promising but not often mentioned], and biomass-fuels, and all sorts of things to "solve" the current problems.
Meanwhile, if we could learn to turn off the freaking lights when we leave the room (guilty here more often than I'd like 8-) and learn to wear a sweater instead of heating the house to 75F (which I *am* good about 8-), and all sorts of simple stuff things will be "Better."
And better is... better.
Re:Still no RTFA? (Score:2)
But if 100 square miles was absurdist but demonstrative of the scale, 10,000 square miles is only moreso.
8-)
Re:Still no RTFA? (Score:2)
The envrionmental impacts are also more serious than originally thought.
The salmon issues here in the north-west UAS are bad enough, but without the regular release of non-trivial fractions of the flow at near-flood proportions lots of down-stream habatat just disapears.
One dam can stop 90% of the silt-flow of a river, which can improvish
MOD PARENT DOWN (Score:2)
It certianly doesn't apply (mechanically) when you are talking about a large farm of small generators. The mechanical drag alone, before wear and "storing water in the bright sun" loss to evaporation and devices getting clogged with alge in execelent sunlight factors in
Directly running a pump significantly larger than a garden hose to pump wat
WTF all the hydrogen talk in reply to SOLAR? (Score:2)
The _article_ was not trying to sell a panaceia. It's just honest work trying to solve "their share" (and then some) of an emerging/ongoing problem. So the solar power plant only works during peak power demand time? GOOD ENOUGH. Decommissioning every gas/coal fired peak-load accessory generator in the sunny south-west would be a *HUGE* win. Hell, 10% would be OUTSTANDING.
So the _SOLAR_ ha
Re:where's the... (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:where's the... (Score:3, Insightful)
Oh, and where do you suggest we ge
Re:where's the... (Score:2)
Oh, and why not just use nature's solar generators in the form of ethanol and soy diesel? They're easy to make and more fun to look at than 100 square miles of silver dishes.
(Yes, ethanol can be made by energy efficient means once enough production infrastructure is in place. It will not, over the long run take more energy to make than it produces.)
So what? (Score:2)
Considering that *NONE* of the power grid currently stores power, demanding the solar-power guy "solve" that problem in one paragraph of an interview on promising solar power generation is asking a bit _much_ don't you think?
Do you propose he stop working just because his power system "only works" d
Re:follow the sunflowers (Score:2)
Re:Interesting (Score:4, Informative)
First I'd like to say that there has been a record amount of interest in this post. (dont mod me down, I can't help being disapointed in a posibly world saving subject being ignored in favor of less important subjects)
Take it easy. You know, there have been prototypes of these stirling dish things since at least the early 1980:s. If they can be made economically viable in the 2010 timeframe as the article suggest, I'm sure they will be discussed a lot.
There was a project some years ago in Australia where the heat difference between (one of our) desert surface and pipes/heat exchange buried underground was going to power a whole lot of engines. I'm not positive but I think they were Stirling engines that had been changed in some way (possibly day and night running- desert cold at night). They got to the stage of cupple of dozen in a test area to show efficiency workability etc. then nothing. Googling it doesnt show much. Rumors of state govt being bought out by the local energy companies which rezoned and shut them down. The usual Nexus style hippies chanted conspiracy, maybe it just wasnt as efficient as it could have been at that time.
Anyway, plenty of room and plenty of heat and cold differentials in the desert(s).
The efficiency of a heat engine is proportional to the heat difference between the cold and hot sides. In the proposal above, the heat difference is pretty small, so you'd need lots of expensive engines and piping to produce little power. I assume that was what killed it, rather than some Big Oil conspiracy.
Just something bothers me. Wouldnt the loss associated with transporting the energy back to where it is needed (suberbia, industrial and city use) by leakage make it not sustainable?
No worries, mate. Modern high voltage DC transmission lines, often used for long range transmission, have losses of about 4 % per 1000 km.
What are the efficiency ratings of other energy storages such as spliting water into Hydrogen and Oxygen to be stored separately and recombined when needed to make combustion engine generate power?
Appalingly low. Electrolysis is about 70 %, liquefaction 66 %, burning the hydrogen in a combustion engine about 40 % for a medium sized stationary engine. In total, 18 % efficient, compared to 96 % efficient for 1000 km cabling.
Re:stirling in space one end hot one cold (Score:2)
Re:How does stirling compare with algal biodiesel? (Score:2)
I wonder if the "rest" of the world would count biodiesel against our carbon budget?