From making electricity available without wires to
using fir trees to produce high-octane rocket fuel, science is making
ingenious breakthroughs in energy alternatives including discoveries
around waste heat re-use and solar.
Scientists in the US have crossed a fir tree
with a gut bacterium, fed it beef soup, and watched it deliver the
chemistry of the highest-octane rocket fuel. They combined genetic
manipulation and microbiology to open the way for a new kind of biofuel
manufacture for military aviation and space technology.
Pamela Peralta-Yahya and research collaborators at the Georgia Institute of Technology report in the journalSynthetic Biology that
their new technique has some way to go before it delivers a high-energy
spirit to match the missile fuel JP-10, which has the chemical formula
C10H16, costs US$25 a gallon, and only tiny amounts of which can be
extracted from each barrel of crude oil.
But the scientists say their approach has produced six times the pinene of earlier biofuel efforts. Pinene, an aromatic chemical produced by
conifers, is a precursor to JP-10 and it too has the chemical formula
C10H16. The researchers engineered the microbe Escherichia coli with
enzymes from two North American pines and the Grand Fir tree (Abies
grandis), then set the bugs to work on flasks of beef broth. Their best
result was 32mg of pinene per litre. To be competitive with JP-10, the scientists
need to do 26 times better. Dr Peralta-Yahya says the problems ahead are
“difficult, but not insurmountable”.
CRYSTAL MARVEL
In another instance of laboratory ingenuity and scholarly resource, Mercouri Kanatzidis and colleagues atNorthwestern University, Illinois, began experimenting with crystal forms of the compound tin selenide, and found it to be a marvel of thermoelectric potential. Thermoelectric materials are very poor
conductors of heat, but good conductors of electricity. Most energy is
wasted as heat, which is conducted away from a combustion engine or
coal-fired power generator. The discovery therefore raises the
possibility that this waste heat could contained and be converted to
electricity.
The evaluation of thermoelectric devices
involves highly-specialized calculations, such as the “dimensionless
figure of merit ZT”, but the researchers report in Nature journal that, at around 650°C, their tin selenide crystal has the highest reported ZT to date. Because it is such a poor conductor of heat,
one side of the sample can heat up and stay hot, while the other stays
cool. And because the heat is not dissipated, it remains concentrated
and can be used again to generate more electricity. “A good thermoelectric material is a business proposition – as much commercial as it is scientific,” saidVinayak Dravid,
one of the study’s authors. “You don’t have to convert much of the
world’s wasted energy into useful energy to make a material very
exciting.”
SOLAR GLARE
While US scientists were looking for more
powerful biofuels, and finding unexpected thermoelectric properties in
relatively common minerals, British scientists found a way to take the
shine out of solar panels.
Solar energy farms can generate a problematic glare, and a team from Loughborough University, UK, has devised a multi-layer, anti-reflection coating that could reduce reflection from photovoltaic panels, while at the same time improving their efficiency.
A glass surface reflects 4% of the light that
smacks into it, so the scratch-resistant, durable coating – of zirconium
oxide and silicon dioxide – would actually improve power output by 4%. Other researchers are engaged in finding innovative ways to get the power to the consumer. At the Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology (KAIST),
researchers report that they have a developed a dipole coil resonant
system that can transmit electricity across a range of five metres, and
power, for instance, a large LED TV system and three 40 watt fans.
This is an advance on a 2007 experiment at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) in the US, when electric current was transmitted wirelessly across a two-meter space. The technology remains – for the time being at
least ? costly to implement, and still in its early stages. But its
begetters have high hopes. “Just like we see Wi-Fi zones everywhere
today, we will eventually have many Wi-power zones at such places as
restaurants and streets that provide electric power wirelessly to electronic devices,” predicts Chun T Rim,
a nuclear and quantum engineer. “We will all use the devices anywhere
without tangled wires attached, and anytime without worrying about
charging their batteries.”
Source: Climate news network
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