Self-Cleaning Buildings to Fight Smog 262
bryan8m writes "Using technology already available for self-cleaning windows and bathroom tiles, scientists hope to paint up cities with materials that dissolve and wash away pollutants when exposed to sun and rain. The idea: UV rays hitting the titanium dioxide coated cement and concrete trigger a catalytic reaction that destroys the molecules of pollutants, including nitrogen oxides."
Solar? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Solar? (Score:2, Informative)
But of course it would be much better for the environment.
Re:Solar? (Score:2)
There was an old lady who swallowed a fly...
Tarffic is the primary cause of pollution (Score:5, Insightful)
Traffic is the primary cause of pollution in inhabited areas and car emissions are harder to control than those of a single 250 MW coal plant.
Re:Tarffic is the primary cause of pollution (Score:2)
Re:Tarffic is the primary cause of pollution (Score:4, Informative)
The trick was that they replaced nine undereground power lines, that were already oil-cooled. Basically, the continuing cost for the LN2 is less than the pumps needed to circulate the oil.
The three new cables contain only 250 pounds of superconductor, yet they will be able to carry just as much current as the 18,000 pounds of copper in the nine cables they replace.
The trick is, you don't need to pump the LN2, as it just boils off, you just have to keep it 'topped off'. The cables are heavily insulated, so the boil off rate is actually low, as the cables don't produce any heat, whereas the copper lines did.
I remember reading that they actually made money on the replacement, as 18,000 pounds of copper is quite a chunck of change.
A source [ufl.edu], the rest I'm working off of remembered articles that aren't easily found on the internet today.
I'll admit, it's going to be a while before they bother running a superconducting line to your neighborhood, but for the main trunks out of power stations, into cities, or other major distibution centers, it makes sense.
Yes, traffic causes most city pollution (Score:2)
Re:Tarffic is the primary cause of pollution (Score:2)
Re:Tarffic is the primary cause of pollution (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Solar? (Score:5, Interesting)
[/sarcasm]
Seriously though, whilst I'm all in favour of nuclear it lacks a lot of public support.
A better idea would be to plant rooftop gardens, and hang cylindrical turbines off the sides of buildings. Cities act like big wind tunnels between tall buildings, cylindrical turbines could be used to turn this air into power for the building whilst the garden on the top helps buffer some of the pollution and generally make a nicer place.
Alternatively, make the centre of large cities pedestrian only.
Re:Solar? (Score:3, Insightful)
Nuclear power lacks public support because of an accounting problem.
The nuclear industry is the first we've developed where the greatest costs occur in the post-production period (with waste and byproduct management). The Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (GAAP) that guide economic modelling (and accounting in general) don't address this kind of post production cost very well. Waste management and recycling efforts have usually been regarded as refinements of the basic spreadsheet models, not as c
Re:Solar? (Score:2)
Re:Solar? (Score:2)
This isn't Sim City where so long as your power output is greater than your usage the buildings stay powered.
Re:Solar? (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Solar? (Score:2)
Re:Solar? (Score:2)
Both have a long way to go to compete or be considered 'equivalent' to hydro.
Re:Solar? (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Solar? (Score:2)
However, solar does have some major drawbacks that many people do not know of. Most photovoltaic cells use some
Re:Solar? (Score:3, Informative)
They are not a magical answer to all our polution, and energy needs.
Re:Solar? (Score:2)
Re:Solar? (Score:2)
As a rough guide, ecconomic payback SHOULD give some measure of all forms of payback. If the energy costs are properly priced (which of course they are not perfectly priced, but they have some validity), then of course if there is an ecconimic payback time, the energy payback time should be shorter than that - otherwise you are somehow getting the energy being produced by the panel
Oh sure, everyone is happy now with this... (Score:2)
Then the buildings band together to start the extermination of the human race!
STAY AWAY FROM THE BUILDINGS.
Re:Solar? (Score:2)
Proportionally that little and old 250MW unit won't put out a lot - NOx and SOx are removed with water and ash is trapped with electrostatic precipitatators or bag filters - it's been done for decades. You can't put a lot in the way of pollution controls on a car without adding a lot of weight - power plants don't have that problem. Power plants don't tend to be in the middle of cities anymore, and it's inthe middle of cities with slow moving traf
Re:Solar? (Score:2)
Re:Solar? (Score:3, Interesting)
Coal plants might still put o
Re:Solar? (Score:2)
A typical car only needs 5 to 30 HP to maintain highway speeds, so you are off by at least an order of magnitude.
Re:Solar? (Score:2)
Re:Solar? (Score:2)
Re:Solar? (Score:4, Informative)
Wouldn't it be smarter to cover the buildings with solar panels, use that to power half the building and cut down of the amount of smog created by the power plants instead? Your car puts out NOTHING compared to a 250Mw coal plant.
Actually from what I read, I think one place might of been in HomePower mag [homepower.com] and/or Solar Today mag [solartoday.org] , was that vehicles are the single biggest contributers to manmade greenhouse gases. A simple remedy for this though is Biodiesel [biodiesel.org] . Without modification diesel engines can run on biodiesel. Actually Rudolph Diesel the designer of the diesel engine designed it to run on most any vegetable oil. And because the plants used to make the oil soak up carbon dioxide they are carbon neutral. It's not so much how much one vehicle puts out as it is the total of all vehicles.
However more building should include solar power in their design, active and passive. One way as you've stated is pv panels. Another way is a thin film that's being developed that can be applied to windows and the sides of building to generate solar power. Another method of power generation are wind genies, wind generators.
FalconRe:dependance on gasoline (Score:2)
For the ultimate in mileage...5 years ago, Honda came out with a car that got 60-70 MPG (my dad bought one, and his li
Re:dependance on gasoline (Score:3, Informative)
You're thus limited to the charging your solar cells could do while actually in the process of your commute. The hours most pe
Re:dependance on gasoline (Score:2)
I also think you have vastly overestimated the percentage of the population that uses a garage or carport. The vast majority of home I know of use driveway parking.
Still solar cell powered cars are impractical for other reasons, already mentioned in this thread.
Re:dependance on gasoline (Score:2)
You surely haven't heard of hydrogen fuel cells, have you?
Link [slashdot.org]
link [slashdot.org]
link [slashdot.org]
link [slashdot.org]
Re:dependance on gasoline (Score:2)
Already happened in offices and other commercial buildings long ago. They pioneered the switch from incandescent to florescent to save money on power bills, something homeowners are only now beginning to discover (as the price of compact florescents comes down).
BTW, I second the idea for homes. I converted my house over to compact florescent the week after I moved in. It was a large initial investment
Re:dependance on gasoline (Score:2)
Re:Solar? (Score:2)
Maybe a karma whore will post links (I'm too lazy).
Re:Self-cleaning windows? (Score:2)
Yup they are...
But something that got forgotten in this whole discussion was the original discussion. Ti02 is the prime ingredent in LATEX Paint. So start painting to prevent pollution guys... Well if you don't consider the other parts of the paint.
The best thing to do is sit back and laugh really hard. Thanks
titanium dioxide? (Score:3, Insightful)
the way to fight polution is at the source. stop corporations from producing polution. if that is done, then the people won't have to spend tax dollars cleaning up the mess.
Comment removed (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:titanium dioxide? (Score:5, Insightful)
How is it a free economy when corporations are given power by the state to pollute the property of third persons with limited liability? When a corporations puts pollutants into the air and they enter my property and they hurt me when I breath them, I have no avenue of fair recourse because the government forces me through violence, and the threat of, to accept the damage without proper or any compensation.
How is it a free economy when people are forced by the state to accept corporate pollution of their properties? State interference is not part of a free market. If it was a free market, I would be able to find recompense from all of these polluters for their harm of my person and destruction of my properties.
I agree with you that "right wing" does not apply to this situation very well.
Re:titanium dioxide? (Score:2)
Now if only there could be some set of trolls to remind the majority of trolls of this...
Re:titanium dioxide? (Score:2)
Oh yes, a free economy. Because that works out so very well doesn't it? In a free economy, corporations do whatever it takes in the short term to improve the bottom line, even at the expense of the long term. Just ask HP how cutting all their research a couple of years back is working out for those 10,000 people they freshly laid off. Better yet, for a succinct reasoning of why true free markets would be a disaster for everyone, check out the definition of the "tragedy of
Re:titanium dioxide? (Score:3)
Re:titanium dioxide? (Score:2)
Re:titanium dioxide? (Score:2)
If you're interested in the environmental effect overall, that's actually a very good thing to do. Tree's soak up a lot more CO2 as they grow than they do when they're at their full size. From an environmental aspect cutting trees down and planting new ones is considerably better than leaving fully grown trees standing.
Of course, that sort of ignores the heritage of ol
Re:titanium dioxide? (Score:2)
It seems to me that this is a solution that can be used in conjunction with such efforts.
In fact there was even some questions as to how effective this would be
"Trying to clean up air pollution seems to me to be a stretch," said Reynaldo Barreto, a chemistry professor at Purdue University in Indiana. "It doesn't mean it can't be done. But there's a
Yes, but how about my lungs? (Score:2, Insightful)
That's the point (Score:3, Informative)
They try to make a house work like a tree to actively reduce the amount of pollution in the air. That the house stays clean is just a nice side-effect
Now, can we put DC on the transmission lines? (Score:3, Interesting)
The rationale here being the DC will ionize the air, charging the impurities, thereby encouraging them to head for and adhere to these pollution-destroying buildings.
Incidentally, ionizing the air is NOT a new concept. Its been happening in nature since Earth began... especially during thunderstorms when the air is so charged it breaks down - we call it lightning.
I have often wondered if dirgibles, charged from being moored to the business end of a large vandergraff generator ( several stories tall ) would do the trick.
If a small electrostatic generator drops the crap out of the air in a room, would a bigger one clear stagnant air over an entire city... such as the Los Angeles basin?
Re:Now, can we put DC on the transmission lines? (Score:5, Informative)
DC is horribly inefficient at delivering power. Besides, high voltage is high voltage. Power lines run just under the voltage needed to ionize the air. Once you ionize the air, then you set up currents, and those currents are sucking power, power that isn't being delivered, and could have been charged for.
Re:Now, can we put DC on the transmission lines? (Score:2, Informative)
I admit for constant-speed rotating machinery, its damn hard to beat 3-phase AC.
I have noted several companies are now investigating DC again as new devices are becoming available which will make high-power DC-DC converters economically do-able. Here's an exa
Re:Now, can we put DC on the transmission lines? (Score:2)
Re:Now, can we put DC on the transmission lines? (Score:2)
1) You get improved conduictivity due to no skin effect
2) You dont have eddy losses.
As the other poster mentioned, it's just harder to convert voltages with DC, but we are getting better at it.
Re:Now, can we put DC on the transmission lines? (Score:2)
Re:Now, can we put DC on the transmission lines? (Score:2)
Re:Now, can we put DC on the transmission lines? (Score:2)
Consider the source (Score:3, Insightful)
Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Consider the source (Score:2)
That said, people are not completely immune to good arguments, public campaigns and change of lifestyle, if you offer them a viable alternative. If you have a good, capilar and affordabl
A 1%/year tax escalator (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:A 1%/year tax escalator (Score:2, Funny)
Year 1 - 1% tax
Year 2 - 1.01% tax
Year 3 - 1.0201% tax
Year 50 - 1.62834% tax
Year 233 - 10.059% tax
That doesn't look like a viable plan to me...
Re:A 1%/year tax escalator (Score:2)
Yeah, I have been saying that for years (Score:2)
Re:Yeah, I have been saying that for years (Score:2)
Re:Yeah, I have been saying that for years (Score:2)
It would take an intelligent president to do this. And the last 2 intelligent presidents that we had, we only gave them one term each.
But it is still the right thing to do. It is a nice free economy way of handling things.
Re:A 1%/year tax escalator (Score:3, Interesting)
The US is almost alone in having fuel prices as low as they are. Adding significant fuel taxes won't change everything, but taxes on those levels for fuel does push people to consider fuel economy to a lot higher degree than what people in the US currently does. It also inevitably lead a lot of people to seriously consider public transport (with the US public transport system being what it is, for that effect to make a difference pushing any
Re:Consider the source (Score:2)
The government is doubly guilty here:
Why do France and Japan have sizable nuclear infrastructures? Beca
Re:Consider the source (Score:2)
What's happening with spent fuel is probably what should have been done from the beginning. Fuel rods that have cooled for a decade or more are being sealed in air-cooled armored casks. These casks are safe, relatively cheap, and secure. They won't corrode for centuries, and they leave the fuel ac
Why not just fight the root of the problem (Score:4, Insightful)
How about buildings with living roofs [wikipedia.org] or use solar panels and wind turbines to reduce reliance on the local smog producing powerplant.
Or move on over to and build a community [wikipedia.org] to reuse energies wasted by other nearby businesses (like the heat that would otherwise be lost through restaurant ovens can be used to help heat the floor above, etc).
Or, you know... we can just pretend it is not there. Either way...
Re:Why not just fight the root of the problem (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Why not just fight the root of the problem (Score:2)
That is great stuff (Score:2)
of course (Score:3, Funny)
Carbon? (Score:4, Interesting)
Catalyst for CO2 (Score:2)
Re:Catalyst for CO2 (Score:2)
Re:Carbon? (Score:2)
What is this newfangled "plants and trees" technology of which you speak? If these things do what you claim, why don't we just make more of them?
(sorry, just being silly) =P
Neat idea, but... (Score:2)
Pollution is a big deal (Score:3, Interesting)
So, if you're a geek and you value your grey matter, you'll take pollution seriously.
In my view, one of the best ways around pollution is greater use of public transportation (expecially trains and such) - this is a problem in the US, where the existing public transportation companies have been bought and dismantled shortly after WWII - and greater utilization of nuclear, hydro, solar and wind power plants for production of electrical energy.
Re:Pollution is a big deal (Score:2)
Breaking down Organic Material (Score:2, Funny)
Better not lean against these babies then I guess...
Looks like a dupe (Score:2)
Deaths from air pollution and nuclear power (Score:4, Insightful)
About 3 million people die every year from air pollution. That's about an order of magnitude greater than the number of people who have died in the entire history of nuclear power and nuclear weapons, including Chernobyl, Hiroshima, and Nagasaki.
However, if you ask a random person which causes more deaths, what do you think they'll say?
Re:Deaths from air pollution and nuclear power (Score:3, Insightful)
The main problem with BS statistics like yours is that these deaths can be recycled for whatever the cause du jure.
Suppose someone dies of pneumonia. Due to poor health caused by a brain tumor. And they smoked cigarettes. And used to work as a asbestos remover.
Died from pollution: Check
Died from using a cell phone: Check
Died from asbestos: Check
Died from cigarettes: Check
This person died 4
plants are more efficient (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:plants are more efficient (Score:2)
Titanium dioxide has other problems (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Effective? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Effective? (Score:2)
Besides, catalysts can also accelerate synthesis of OHTER pollutants. For example, some titanium compounds (titanium acetate, AFAIR) are catalysts in syntesis of dioxins (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dioxin [wikipedia.org]).
Re:Effective? (Score:2)
That's great. Someone creates a way to combat pollution, and you're willing to dismiss it because it might end up causing more pollution. You're right. It might, but then again, it might not. You haven't linked to any articles so I see no reason to assume it will.
Re:Effective? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:FTFA (Score:3, Interesting)
> Carbon dioxide and water are easy enough to take care of. Not sure what to do with the nitrate salts. Fertilizer?
Ok, let me get this straight. We've now got a process that allows you to paint an urban building with a substance that automatically transforms the ambient pollution into nitrate fertilizer?
Congratulations, you're only a step or two away from creating the world's
Re:FTFA (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Where does the poop GO? (Score:2)
Some very basic chemistry will show you that if titanium dioxide was reactive enough to worry about we wouldn't have so much trouble making titanium out of it.
Re:Where does the poop GO? (Score:2)
Re:Trees. (Score:2)
And build a new power plant to run the UV lamps.
Re:The solution (Score:2)
It's fucking yuppy idiots like you that make me sad to be an american. This is the fucking land of the free motherfucker! If you don't like it you can fucking leave!
+1 sarcasm
Seriously though why not a bigger push towards a good metro system [or better?]. Places like California sure could use a rail line or two. Fucking escalade driving motherfuckers gotta be taken
Nanoscale (Score:2)
What nobody has said for some reason is that an otherwise harmless material is not necessarily harmless at the nanoscale [i-sis.org.uk], so you have to go back and do toxicology s