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Index » Regional/Local » USA/Canada » Solar / Wind / Geothermal / Efficiency Energy Page: Previous  1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 ... 41, 42, 43  Next
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westslope

westslope Avatar

Location: BC sage brush steppe


Posted: Feb 15, 2021 - 8:28am

Texas wind turbines freeze as Texas orders rolling black outs

Huh!?!!   

Should we Canadians order care packages of white lithium grease and send them to Texas? Or do Texans need lessons in risk management? 

I would really like somebody familiar with the technology of these wind turbines to explain to me how they managed to freeze. I do not recall wind turbines in cold oceans such as the North Atlantic freezing.

R_P

R_P Avatar

Gender: Male


Posted: Aug 6, 2020 - 7:41pm

China poised to power huge growth in global offshore wind energy
islander

islander Avatar

Location: West coast somewhere
Gender: Male


Posted: May 20, 2020 - 7:18am



 Red_Dragon wrote:


 islander wrote:

Interesting, but there just isn't much energy available in a system like that. Triboelectrics had a bit of a burst a few years ago, but energy yields are tiny.  I spend a lot of time managing people's expectations for solar as it is now, I can't wait to see what I get when they find this article. 

 

To whom should I send it? 

 
info@dev.nul

Red_Dragon

Red_Dragon Avatar

Location: Dumbf*ckistan


Posted: May 20, 2020 - 6:52am



 islander wrote:

Interesting, but there just isn't much energy available in a system like that. Triboelectrics had a bit of a burst a few years ago, but energy yields are tiny.  I spend a lot of time managing people's expectations for solar as it is now, I can't wait to see what I get when they find this article. 

 

To whom should I send it? 
islander

islander Avatar

Location: West coast somewhere
Gender: Male


Posted: May 20, 2020 - 6:43am



 Red_Dragon wrote:
 
Interesting, but there just isn't much energy available in a system like that. Triboelectrics had a bit of a burst a few years ago, but energy yields are tiny.  I spend a lot of time managing people's expectations for solar as it is now, I can't wait to see what I get when they find this article. 

Red_Dragon

Red_Dragon Avatar

Location: Dumbf*ckistan


Posted: May 20, 2020 - 5:16am

New solar panels created by Chinese researchers take energy from the friction of falling raindrops, as well as the sun, so it’s an effective source of renewable energy all year round.
Red_Dragon

Red_Dragon Avatar

Location: Dumbf*ckistan


Posted: Jan 2, 2020 - 3:48pm

Update On Wind Turbines and Birds
ColdMiser

ColdMiser Avatar

Location: On the Trail
Gender: Male


Posted: Nov 22, 2019 - 6:50am



 cc_rider wrote:


 haresfur wrote:


 cc_rider wrote:


 haresfur wrote:
a friend worked for a company that had a very efficient generator for turning heat from a solar tracking mirror into electricity. the cool thing was that it could use any heat source so they could park the mirror at night over a gas flame and continue to generate

the company failed because of cash flow, not because of the technology
 
The idea is pretty simple: use focused solar energy to heat water (or other carrier: I've heard liquid sodium is ideal) to make super-heated steam to power turbines. At night just use a gas burner or excess heat from a cement kiln or whatever.  The big solar arrays I've heard about have a problem with too much heat. They have to de-focus the mirrors to keep from burning up the piping.

A big problem is birds, though. As you get closer to the 'furnace', the solar rays get more focused, i.e. hotter. Apparently it'll vaporize anything that gets too close. Your Thanksgiving turkey is ready in three seconds flat though.
c.

 

Actually, the neat thing was that their system was much simpler. The sunlight was focused onto a linear-drive Stirling engine. Basically a shaft held by bearings that looked like the inserts for 45 records (I assume everyone here are old farts and I don't need to explain what those are). In a nutshell, the heat drives the shaft back and forth through a coil, generating electricity. The parts were simple enough that they thought they could repurpose a closed auto manufacturing plant for production. If I recall, their biggest unit was 3 kW.

I can't remember the conversion efficiency, but it was significantly higher than photovoltaic panels and didn't use fancy silicon. Also solar panel efficiency degrades with time. The tradeoff is having the disk reflector and having to keep it tracking the sun.

They were selling units to the military as generators using diesel as the heat source. More efficient than conventional generators. Not that the price is significant to them, but it turns out driving fuel trucks around a war zone is a dangerous job and the less fuel you move, the safer your troops. As a sideline, they could essentially run the system in reverse as a refrigerator. You can get people to stay hydrated with 30 C water but it's really hard to get them to drink 40 C water.

The boss was trying to set up systems in little villages in Bangladesh. One person power companies that could make a living charging cell phones, etc.
 Sounds really cool. It's a shame it's so hard to get alternative energy projects going. To be fair, they require a big initial investment.
c.


 
Good point, you can lead a horse to water but you can't make him pay for the drink

cc_rider

cc_rider Avatar

Location: Bastrop
Gender: Male


Posted: Nov 21, 2019 - 1:05pm



 haresfur wrote:


 cc_rider wrote:


 haresfur wrote:
a friend worked for a company that had a very efficient generator for turning heat from a solar tracking mirror into electricity. the cool thing was that it could use any heat source so they could park the mirror at night over a gas flame and continue to generate

the company failed because of cash flow, not because of the technology
 
The idea is pretty simple: use focused solar energy to heat water (or other carrier: I've heard liquid sodium is ideal) to make super-heated steam to power turbines. At night just use a gas burner or excess heat from a cement kiln or whatever.  The big solar arrays I've heard about have a problem with too much heat. They have to de-focus the mirrors to keep from burning up the piping.

A big problem is birds, though. As you get closer to the 'furnace', the solar rays get more focused, i.e. hotter. Apparently it'll vaporize anything that gets too close. Your Thanksgiving turkey is ready in three seconds flat though.
c.

 

Actually, the neat thing was that their system was much simpler. The sunlight was focused onto a linear-drive Stirling engine. Basically a shaft held by bearings that looked like the inserts for 45 records (I assume everyone here are old farts and I don't need to explain what those are). In a nutshell, the heat drives the shaft back and forth through a coil, generating electricity. The parts were simple enough that they thought they could repurpose a closed auto manufacturing plant for production. If I recall, their biggest unit was 3 kW.

I can't remember the conversion efficiency, but it was significantly higher than photovoltaic panels and didn't use fancy silicon. Also solar panel efficiency degrades with time. The tradeoff is having the disk reflector and having to keep it tracking the sun.

They were selling units to the military as generators using diesel as the heat source. More efficient than conventional generators. Not that the price is significant to them, but it turns out driving fuel trucks around a war zone is a dangerous job and the less fuel you move, the safer your troops. As a sideline, they could essentially run the system in reverse as a refrigerator. You can get people to stay hydrated with 30 C water but it's really hard to get them to drink 40 C water.

The boss was trying to set up systems in little villages in Bangladesh. One person power companies that could make a living charging cell phones, etc.
 Sounds really cool. It's a shame it's so hard to get alternative energy projects going. To be fair, they require a big initial investment.
c.


haresfur

haresfur Avatar

Location: The Golden Triangle
Gender: Male


Posted: Nov 21, 2019 - 12:49pm



 cc_rider wrote:


 haresfur wrote:
a friend worked for a company that had a very efficient generator for turning heat from a solar tracking mirror into electricity. the cool thing was that it could use any heat source so they could park the mirror at night over a gas flame and continue to generate

the company failed because of cash flow, not because of the technology
 
The idea is pretty simple: use focused solar energy to heat water (or other carrier: I've heard liquid sodium is ideal) to make super-heated steam to power turbines. At night just use a gas burner or excess heat from a cement kiln or whatever.  The big solar arrays I've heard about have a problem with too much heat. They have to de-focus the mirrors to keep from burning up the piping.

A big problem is birds, though. As you get closer to the 'furnace', the solar rays get more focused, i.e. hotter. Apparently it'll vaporize anything that gets too close. Your Thanksgiving turkey is ready in three seconds flat though.
c.

 

Actually, the neat thing was that their system was much simpler. The sunlight was focused onto a linear-drive Stirling engine. Basically a shaft held by bearings that looked like the inserts for 45 records (I assume everyone here are old farts and I don't need to explain what those are). In a nutshell, the heat drives the shaft back and forth through a coil, generating electricity. The parts were simple enough that they thought they could repurpose a closed auto manufacturing plant for production. If I recall, their biggest unit was 3 kW.

I can't remember the conversion efficiency, but it was significantly higher than photovoltaic panels and didn't use fancy silicon. Also solar panel efficiency degrades with time. The tradeoff is having the disk reflector and having to keep it tracking the sun.

They were selling units to the military as generators using diesel as the heat source. More efficient than conventional generators. Not that the price is significant to them, but it turns out driving fuel trucks around a war zone is a dangerous job and the less fuel you move, the safer your troops. As a sideline, they could essentially run the system in reverse as a refrigerator. You can get people to stay hydrated with 30 C water but it's really hard to get them to drink 40 C water.

The boss was trying to set up systems in little villages in Bangladesh. One person power companies that could make a living charging cell phones, etc.
cc_rider

cc_rider Avatar

Location: Bastrop
Gender: Male


Posted: Nov 21, 2019 - 9:02am



 haresfur wrote:
a friend worked for a company that had a very efficient generator for turning heat from a solar tracking mirror into electricity. the cool thing was that it could use any heat source so they could park the mirror at night over a gas flame and continue to generate

the company failed because of cash flow, not because of the technology
 
The idea is pretty simple: use focused solar energy to heat water (or other carrier: I've heard liquid sodium is ideal) to make super-heated steam to power turbines. At night just use a gas burner or excess heat from a cement kiln or whatever.  The big solar arrays I've heard about have a problem with too much heat. They have to de-focus the mirrors to keep from burning up the piping.

A big problem is birds, though. As you get closer to the 'furnace', the solar rays get more focused, i.e. hotter. Apparently it'll vaporize anything that gets too close. Your Thanksgiving turkey is ready in three seconds flat though.
c.

haresfur

haresfur Avatar

Location: The Golden Triangle
Gender: Male


Posted: Nov 20, 2019 - 4:59am

a friend worked for a company that had a very efficient generator for turning heat from a solar tracking mirror into electricity. the cool thing was that it could use any heat source so they could park the mirror at night over a gas flame and continue to generate

the company failed because of cash flow, not because of the technology
haresfur

haresfur Avatar

Location: The Golden Triangle
Gender: Male


Posted: Nov 20, 2019 - 4:53am



 Red_Dragon wrote:
 

i'm not sure how significant this is, and it's an incremental improvement, not a new technology as the article acknowledges. The cement industry thing is a bit misleading. Yes it uses a lot of heat to make, but a lot of the CO2 release is from turning the limestone CaCO3 into lime CaO and you can't get around that
haresfur

haresfur Avatar

Location: The Golden Triangle
Gender: Male


Posted: Nov 20, 2019 - 4:47am



 ScottFromWyoming wrote:


 Red_Dragon wrote:
 

That's neat, and I wonder about smaller systems on cold days just for heating. Solar cells are cool but it seems more simpler to just gather the heat and warm the house.
 

wear your sunglasses, Mr. ant 
ColdMiser

ColdMiser Avatar

Location: On the Trail
Gender: Male


Posted: Nov 19, 2019 - 4:25pm

 kcar wrote:


 ScottFromWyoming wrote:


 Red_Dragon wrote:
 

That's neat, and I wonder about smaller systems on cold days just for heating. Solar cells are cool but it seems more simpler to just gather the heat and warm the house.
 

Amazing development. If you applied this technology to heating living/working spaces as SFW suggests, I think you'd have to work with large apartment/office buildings.

This is also cool:

Heliogen said it is generating so much heat that its technology could eventually be used to create clean hydrogen at scale.
That carbon-free hydrogen could then be turned into a
fuel for trucks and airplanes."If you can make hydrogen that's green, that's a gamechanger," said Gross. "Long term, we want to be the green hydrogen company."
 
It will be interesting to see if the industries this technology is tailored to, cement, steel etc. will invest in the change over from fossil fuels. Or is it just easier for them to keep what they have in place, continue to use fossil fuels and still make boat loads of money. Its a positive step to develop the tech though. Not holding my breath it will be the new standard. 
kcar

kcar Avatar



Posted: Nov 19, 2019 - 3:55pm



 ScottFromWyoming wrote:


 Red_Dragon wrote:
 

That's neat, and I wonder about smaller systems on cold days just for heating. Solar cells are cool but it seems more simpler to just gather the heat and warm the house.
 

Amazing development. If you applied this technology to heating living/working spaces as SFW suggests, I think you'd have to work with large apartment/office buildings.

This is also cool:

Heliogen said it is generating so much heat that its technology could eventually be used to create clean hydrogen at scale.
That carbon-free hydrogen could then be turned into a
fuel for trucks and airplanes."If you can make hydrogen that's green, that's a gamechanger," said Gross. "Long term, we want to be the green hydrogen company."

ScottFromWyoming

ScottFromWyoming Avatar

Location: Powell
Gender: Male


Posted: Nov 19, 2019 - 10:09am



 Red_Dragon wrote:
 

That's neat, and I wonder about smaller systems on cold days just for heating. Solar cells are cool but it seems more simpler to just gather the heat and warm the house.
Red_Dragon

Red_Dragon Avatar

Location: Dumbf*ckistan


Posted: Nov 19, 2019 - 10:02am

Secretive energy startup backed by Bill Gates achieves solar breakthrough
NoEnzLefttoSplit

NoEnzLefttoSplit Avatar

Gender: Male


Posted: Oct 8, 2019 - 10:59am

 Lazy8 wrote:
NoEnzLefttoSplit wrote:
Isn't that stuff under enormous pressure?

That's why it's fizzy! Just crack the can open slowly.
 
Great for removing tartar! 
Lazy8

Lazy8 Avatar

Location: The Gallatin Valley of Montana
Gender: Male


Posted: Oct 8, 2019 - 10:51am

NoEnzLefttoSplit wrote:
Isn't that stuff under enormous pressure?

That's why it's fizzy! Just crack the can open slowly.
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