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Hans De Keulenaer

CR4 - Thread: How big a capacitor to run a bus? - 0 views

  • Any capacitor large enough to run the bus, would presently be many times the size of the actual bus, thus the capacitors would need to be in a string of trailers behind the bus to power it and leave room for the passengers. If such a capacitor-powered bus was ever designed, then consider how damaging the energy stored in the capacitor/s, if a sudden short circuit developed - it would demolish several city blocks in the resultant explosion. By comparison, energy stored in chemical form is far safer, small volume for large energy storage, easy to control.
Colin Bennett

On Board Energy Storage - Reason Automobile Engineers Chose (Choose) Fossil Fuel : Clea... - 0 views

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    Batteries have to contain all of the chemicals on both sides of their energy releasing equation. The very best batteries available today can store about 0.4 MJ/kg (0.05 kw-hr/lb) including the cases and safety systems. In contrast, gasoline carries about 46 MJ/kg (5.7 kw-hrs/lb).\n\nEven with a 20% efficient IC engine, a gasoline tank stores 20 times as much energy as a battery of equal weight. As the vehicle is moving it gets rid of some of that weight. Battery powered vehicles must carry the full weight of their energy source.\n\nThe energy density difference also plays a key role in the time that it takes to put more energy back on the vehicle once a fuel load is consumed. A two minute fill-up of a 12 gallon tank puts the equivalent of 87 kilowatt-hours into the vehicle, again, taking into account the 20% thermal efficiency.\n\n87 kilowatt-hours in 2 minutes works out to 2.6 MegaWatts. Even with a 220 volt connection, that would require about 11,800 amperes of current. Just imagine the size of the electric cables for that current.\n\nThere are certainly places and applications where electric vehicles have a role, but it is worth remembering that at least five or six generations of engineers have looked very hard at trying to meet transportation needs and they keep coming back to the same fact - when you want to move a vehicle, you need power, (energy per unit time).
Jeff Johnson

Air Storage Is Explored for Energy (NYTimes.com) - 0 views

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    [A] New Jersey company plans to announce on Tuesday [8/27/08] that it is working on a solution to this perennial problem with wind power: using wind turbines to produce compressed air that can be stored underground or in tanks and released later to power generators during peak hours.
Energy Net

The Oil Drum | Passive Solar Design Overview: Part 3 - Thermal Storage Mass - 0 views

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    This is Part 3 in a series on Passive Solar Design by Will Stewart, a Systems Engineer in the energy industry and longtime reader of theoildrum.com. As a new administration considers how best to make future infrastructure investments, it seems like some of the lowest hanging fruit is better utilization of the daily solar flux, not only directly with photovoltaic and hot water, but also in building construction and placement. I encourage our readers to further their understanding of passive solar concepts by reading/bookmarking this series.
Colin Bennett

Will carbon capture ruin groundwater supplies? | Greenbang - 0 views

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    Now the Amercian Water Works Association Research Foundation (AWWARF) is to undertake a project to assess the potential impact underground carbon storage has on the quality of groundwater supplies.
Hans De Keulenaer

Peak Oil News >> Hydrocarbon Alternatives >> Electricity storage Ne plus ultra - 0 views

  • Such a capacitor gauge could become a common sight on the dashboards of the future. A capacitor can discharge and recharge far faster than a battery, making it ideal both for generating bursts of speed and for soaking up the energy collected by regenerative braking. AFS Trinity, a company based in Washington state, has turned that insight into a piece of equipment that it has fitted into an otherwise standard production model as an experiment. The result—the XH-150—was unveiled at this year's Detroit motor show.
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    Short-term PQ is an issue in small and large systems alike.
Colin Bennett

Solar Collecting Roads Heat Buildings in The Netherlands | EcoGeek - 0 views

  • Rather than putting tubes on a rooftop, RES lays the collection system within concrete -- think the black asphalt of a road or runway. The piping connects to undeground storage areas.
Sergio Ferreira

280-MW Solar Plant to Use Molten Salt for Energy Storage - 0 views

  • e Co. (APS), one of Arizona’s leading energy utilities, to build, own and operate what would be the largest solar power plant in the world if operating today.  However, by the time it comes on line in 2011, there will probably be othe
Colin Bennett

Concentrated solar gets salty | Cleantech.com - 0 views

  • Hamilton Sundstrand and US Renewables plan to commercialize a solar thermal system that uses molten salt for energy storage.
Hans De Keulenaer

New Geothermal Energy Project in Halifax to Use Cold Energy Storage - 0 views

  • The project includes the first large-scale application of geothermal cold energy storage.
Sergio Ferreira

Smarter Energy Storage For Solar And Wind Power - 0 views

  • Development of the first hybrid battery suitable for storing electricity from renewable energy sources such as solar and wind is now a step closer.
Colin Bennett

Solaria Panels Win Backing Of Germany's Q-Cells - WSJ.com - 0 views

  • Germany's Q-Cells AG, the world's second-largest manufacturer of solar cells by volume, is throwing funding as well as manufacturing muscle behind a California start-up's new technology to lower the cost of generating electricity from the sun's rays.
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    A lot of movements on solar photovoltaics. At some stage, we need to start thinking about the electricity system when PV becomes successful. In renewables, is there such as thing as being too successful?
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    This applies to any successful, non-despatchable source. Without storage in some form we have to accept that energy will be 'dumped' at times. The technical problem is to develop storage. The political problem is to determine a regulatory framework in which a producer is barred from producing (i.e. earning revenue) at times of overcapacity.
davidchapman

Dutch Companies Investigate Offshore Energy Storage System - 0 views

  • KEMA, in partnership with the civil engineering firm Bureau Lievense and technology illustrators Rudolph and Robert Das, has developed an "Energy Island" concept to store power generated from an offshore wind farm. The concept design is the initial result of an on-going feasibility study being conducted for Dutch energy companies.
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    KEMA, in partnership with the civil engineering firm Bureau Lievense and technology illustrators Rudolph and Robert Das, has developed an "Energy Island" concept to store power generated from an offshore wind farm. The concept design is the initial result of an on-going feasibility study being conducted for Dutch energy companies.
davidchapman

Put some kilowatts in your closet | Tech news blog - CNET News.com - 0 views

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    Altair Nanotechnologies, which specializes in lithium ion batteries, said Monday that it will work with investor AES to develop home energy storage systems that can hold more than 500 kilowatts of energy.
Colin Bennett

Here is the 21st Century Storage and Transmission System for Wind Power - 1 views

  • 1. Transmission Developers would provide electricity transmission in underwater cables (previous story this week), that can be lain in aqueducts, riverbeds and lakes, or down ocean coastlines – clearing the one big hindrance to the development of renewable energy, which is the new transmission needed, and the NIMBYism that succeeds in prevents that from being built, because these would be out of sight. 2. The other,  Riverbank Power – an equally innovative breakthrough, would provide a complete solution to storing wind power (previous story)  effectively making it dispatchable base-load power.
Hans De Keulenaer

Technology Review: Big Energy Storage in Thin Films - 1 views

  • Now researchers at Drexel University in Philadelphia have demonstrated that it's possible to use techniques borrowed from the chip-making industry to make thin-film carbon ultracapacitors that store three times as much energy by volume as conventional ultracapacitor materials. While that is not as much as batteries, the thin-film ultracapacitors could operate without ever being replaced.
Infogreen Global

British researchers to develop solar energy harvesting technology at nannoscale - 2 views

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    Provided new innovative methods of energy capture and storage are discovered, developed and exploited rapidly, the sun could provide sufficient energy to make up the shortfall. Nanoscale technologies can enable new solar energy harvesting solutions through the generation of novel materials that can be deployed to deliver commercially attractive efficiencies at a low cost and a reasonable lifetime of service.
Colin Bennett

Power of cool: Liquid air to store clean energy - 3 views

  • This is why Highview has been testing its 300-kilowatt pilot plant for the past nine months, supplying electricity to the UK's National Grid. The process stores excess energy at times of low demand by using it to cool air to around -190 °C. Excess electricity powers refrigerators that chill the air, and the resulting liquid air, or cryogen, is then stored in a tank at ambient pressure (1 bar). When electricity is needed, the cryogen is subjected to a pressure of 70 bars and warmed in a heat exchanger. This produces a high-pressure gas that drives a turbine to generate electricity. The cold air emerging from the turbine is captured and reused to make more cryogen. Using ambient heat to warm it, the process recovers around 50 per cent of the electricity that is fed in, says Highview's chief executive Gareth Brett. The efficiency rises to around 70 per cent if you harness waste heat from a nearby industrial or power plant to heat the cryogen to a higher than ambient temperature, which increases the turbine's force, he says. Unlike pumped-storage hydropower, which requires large reservoirs, the cryogen plants can be located anywhere, says Brett. Batteries under development in Japan have efficiencies of around 80 to 90 per cent, but cost around $4000 per kilowatt of generating capacity. Cryogenic storage would cost just $1000 per kilowatt because it requires fewer expensive materials, claims Brett.
Glycon Garcia

Climate, Energy and Environment News from Latin America: 1.3 - 1.7.2011 | Amanda Maxwel... - 1 views

  • n 2010, thermal energy displaced hydro as the major source of energy generation for the Chilean Central Interconnected System.  Coal, natural gas, and diesel supplied over 50% of energy consumed while hydropower accounted for 48%.  This trend is expected to continue in 2011 if current water shortage conditions persist. (El Mercurio, 1/4/11)  Last year’s drought created a 26% increase in thermal generation as compared to 2009.
  • The Regional Energy Efficiency Strategy initiative led by Bun-ca has reported an energy savings of 9368 MWh over the past six years, equivalent to 4992 tons of carbon dioxide, by working with 190 companies in the industrial and commercial sectors to become more energy efficient.   Recently UNEP’s En.lighten study estimated that Costa Rica could save 276,000 MWh and $27.6 million per year if they changed all light bulbs to CFLs.  The cost of this change was estimated to be $22.63 million.  (El Financiero CR, 1/3/11)
  • The Mexican government is planning to invest four billion dollars to build a one thousand megawatt renewable energy storage facility in Northern Mexico.   The facility will use a special kind of sodium sulfide batteries for the project which is expected to be completed in the next six years.  (Clean Techies, 1/6/11)
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