Scientists Recycle CO2 with Sunlight to Make Fuel 289
An anonymous reader brings us this article from Wired about a new method to produce fuel with the help of concentrated sunlight and carbon dioxide. The process "reverses" combustion, breaking down the CO2 into carbon monoxide, which is then used as a building block for hydrocarbons. Quoting:
"The Sandia team envisions a day when CR5s are installed in large numbers at coal-fired power plants. Each of them could reclaim 45 pounds of carbon dioxide from the air daily and produce enough carbon monoxide to make 2.5 gallons of fuel. Coupling the CR5 with CO2 reclamation and sequestration technology, which several scientists already are pursuing, could make liquid hydrocarbons a renewable fuel."
More Technical Info (Score:5, Informative)
Vaporware (Score:2, Funny)
I have come up with a catchy name for the process. (Score:2)
Whaddya guys think?
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Re:Vaporware (Score:4, Insightful)
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I suppose you neglected to read the whole "solar energy" part of the article? The point of all these things, be they this plan or biofuels, isn't some magic pixie dust source of free energy. It's that the easiest way of getting solar energy into a useful form might be to take a detour through plants or CO or steam or something else.
Fortunately, some people are actually trying to solve these problems rather than bitching on /.
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underwhelming (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:underwhelming (Score:4, Informative)
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2) We'll likely be worrying about something new. That's because we have short attention spans, not because we will have found global warming not to be a problem.
3) We won't have run out of fossil fuels...but we may have run out of the relatively clean ones. We *may* have run out of helium.
4) Green energy sources are possible, but that probably won't be sufficient to more than ameliorate the problem. We need t
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"CR5s are installed in large numbers at coal-fired power plants. Each of them could reclaim 45 pounds of carbon dioxide from the air daily and produce enough carbon monoxide to make 2.5 gallons of fuel"
Each of the CR5s produce 2.5 gallons... large numbers of CR5 means 2.5 x "large number" per plant per day.
Re:underwhelming (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:underwhelming (Score:4, Insightful)
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Why even bother piping in CO2? I hear Monsanto has genetically engineered plants to pull CO2 RIGHT FROM THE ATMOSPHERE. All hail Monsanto, Savior of Mankind and Protector of Intellectual Property (not necessarily in that order). :-P
Anyway, I think the nice thing about these CR5s is that they don't seem to require much external processing. Just put CO2 and Water in and get hydrocarbon fuels out. Not to mention O2. I'm sure the O2 the
OK, Let's Do the Math (Score:2)
Gee, so, given that coal powerplants in the USA alone produce 1.8 millon metric tons of CO2 per year, we would need 11 million of these devices installed in the US to make American coal power carbon neutral.
Maybe this should help everyone realize just what a bad, bad idea coal power really is, especially when we have much better alternatives.
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Not to mention that even if you did convert all the CO2 from the coal plants... you'd just be burning it again in cars (or something else). The entire process would not be carbon neutral. You're merely reusing the carbon once. In the end, you're releasing the exact same net amount of CO2 into the atmosphere.
Might as well just use the solar energy to create electricity directly and reduce the amoun
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And what would the cars be burning otherwise?
Oil is a fossil fuel too, using coal twice saves on burning gasoline once.
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The available (today) alternatives are natural gas (still a fossil fuel, still produces CO2, outrageously expensive per BTU), oil (same thing, plus the Middle East issues), and nuclear (waste, politics). Hydro, wind, geothermal, and solar simply cannot provide enough energy given current technology.
Coal's looking pretty good to me.
Re:underwhelming (Score:5, Interesting)
Great idea in the equatorial region, but solar really doesn't count as an option in the polar two-thirds of the planet (at least not until we have near-100% efficient PV panels that cost a pittance).
I would also point out that very few companies seem to want to build solar power plants, even in ideal places such as the vast tracts of desert wasteland in the US SouthWest. I presume this results because the long term costs might look great, but the books would take a big hit up front, and most companies (or at least, their current boards) couldn't care less beyond next quarter.
Given those two facts, we can either talk endlessly about why we don't use cool-tech-X, or we can deal with the reality we have now: We use a LOT of cheap and dirty coal power plants. And it costs considerably less to retrofit them with spiffy scrubbers such as TFA mentions than it does to rebuild new clean plants.
Also, who says only power plants can use this? Why couln't I (and everyone else who might care enough to give something like this a try) buy one (probably a scaled-down version to make it affordable) and toss it in my backyard? Five or ten tons a year, times a few hundred thousand people who want a free gallon or two of gasoline per day, could really make a difference.
No one renewable energy source will solve all our problems. Between them all, however, perhaps we can at least keep the planet habitable for a few more generations of humans.
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It does not say in the article, but normal air has a much lower C02 %
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Corn and oil don't suffer massive transmission lossses over distances of mere hundreds of miles.
Re:underwhelming (Score:4, Insightful)
Interesting? Mods.. please. I really hope the poster was joking.
As if we have a limited supply of solar energy. Yes, we better not do this because we might drain the sun.
The sad thing is that I think there are far too many people on this forum who are completely uninterested in technologies like this. Yeah, sure, we'd love to be able to grab all the energy we need from the sun and we'd love to be able to store during dark periods or transmit it with relatively low loss from lit areas to unlit areas. And it'd be great if we could harvest energy from the winds (hey, I'm a sailboat racer.. I do it all the time) or from the natural water flows.
However, until we can get all of these technologies working, something we may never see in our lifetimes, wouldn't it be nice if we could reduce the amount of pollution we produce and start harvesting at least some amount of energy from the sun? It's basically free energy. Every little thing we can do to use it will greatly improve our ability to continue the lifestyles we enjoy while reducing our environmental footprint.
We've got at least a few generations and probably many more to work this out and come up with creative ways to both meet our demands for energy and reduce our environmental footprint.
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i dunno (Score:2)
Doesn't make sense (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Doesn't make sense (Score:5, Insightful)
If it works, it is a clever solution.
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The fact that this kind of secondary use of solar energy is starting to come about is a much more interesting development. Sure, you can generate electricity/heat water/etc from solar, but what else can we do with that energy that is also beneficial? THAT's interesting.
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Solar power as of yet, is not effective enough to produce the energy of a major coal plant (with the same density of land area used). Coal plants however, pollute en-masse and this addition makes them more efficient and less hazardous to the environment as a whole.
N
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Of course it will be impossible to get enough energy to do that from solar energy. Oh well!
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Re:Doesn't make sense (Score:5, Insightful)
To some extent, yes. The main problem is that electricity produced needs to be (almost) instantly consumed. Chemical storage of the energy avoids that problem. As such, there are various forms of chemical energy storage, ranging from batteries, through hydrogen, through ammonia to hydrocarbons, all with their own problems and advantages.
With batteries, the main trouble is they store too little and they (comparatively) rapidly break down.
Fuel cells can run on hydrogen or ammonia, with varying success. Hydrogen is a PITA to store, but perhaps ammonia is a simpler compromise.
Or hydrocarbons. Which have the advantage of being easy to store and fairly stable.
The thing about the energy crisis is there is no lack of energy (in fact, global warming is in essense an excess of it, and provides excesses of it in the form of weather). There's just a huge problem of extracting, transporting and, above all, storing that energy so you can use it when and where you need it.
Re:Doesn't make sense (Score:5, Funny)
And unlike gasoline, you wouldn't have to clean up an ammonia spill. In ammonia-fueled car, fuel spill cleans you!
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Yes, but using CO2 as a battery seems like one of the worst solutions.
If you want to store large amounts of electricity, pumping water, flywheels, and methods like that work quite well.
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Oh, I agree that pumped water storage and such are superior but that's on a grid-level. It doesn't solve the portability or (to some extent) transmission/offline use issues. You're not going to have them in a car or in a cabin in the mountains, or running hospital backup generators. (And on the grid-level I expect the lazy/desperate alternative will resolve that question: nuke plants.)
But while hydrocarbons stink as an energy storage medium, th
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Then you use the compressed air to drive compressed air engines - even small cars for urban use (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Air_car).
If compressed air leaks out of its storage, you get
Homes could compress air during the day and consume it at night - or during the next day in their cars.
Compressed air is energy stored in a readily available, non-polluting medium. When it is used, it just returns into the atmos
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Look up over
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Re:Doesn't make sense (Score:4, Interesting)
For example, in Norway we produce much of our power using hydroelectric powerplants that run water coming from large magazines in our high mountains trough turbines attached to generators. Very nice:
It's an excellent thing for combining with other renewables: When the sun shines, use that. When the wind blows, use that. When tides are strong, use those. When neither produces much, dial up a hydroelectric or two.
Better still:
With modest investment, the things can be used as batteries: If you've at any time got to -much- power from other sources, use excess power to pump water uphill to one of the magazines, where it can be stored safely for months until needed. (yeah, this pump-turbine cycle will waste like 40% of your power, but that's true for most other kinds of batteries too)
Sucks if you live somewhere -flat- with no or little rainfall, I guess.
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1. Get a high mountain
2. Build hydroelectric powerplants
3. Sell electricity
4. Profit
I never realized it was that easy. So now I only need a mountain...
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Warragamba Dam near Sydney stores enough water for five years and hasn't been full since 1987. Now that's a drought!
Renewable not! (Score:4, Insightful)
The only cycles which potentially work over the long term are: (a) solar; (b) fusion reactors; (c) breeder reactors; (d) thorium fuel cycle reactors. That is probably in decreasing order of length of time we could sustain our civilization off of those sources (your opinions may differ).
The coal power plant output conversion of CO2 to liquid fuels simply shifts the problem from an CO2 source one can easily sequester (coal plant smokestacks) to one which is much less easy to sequester (automobile exhausts). You have a fundamental problem here which is when are we going to incorporate the cost of "full sustainability" into our energy costs? That means any carbon you put into the atmosphere you pay to take back out of the atmosphere. Ideally you do more than that to reduce atomospheric CO2 levels back to pre-industrial levels [1], i.e. you are taking more CO2 out of the atmosphere than you are putting into it. We are currently very far from being able to do that.
So long as we continue to live off of the reduced carbon sources (stored solar energy harvested by plants hundreds of millions of years ago) and don't fully pay for them we have a real problem.
Robert
1. Or humanity makes a decision to allow the glaciers and icecaps to melt, the sea levels rise a bit, some islands and low lying areas get flooded, weather patterns to change a bit *and* spends the money necessary to mitigate the negative effects of these processes.
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If we solve those problems for solar cells, we may be on th
Short term, long term, one size doesn't fit all (Score:3, Informative)
At the long term, they hope to develop the technology further so it can extract the CO2 needed directly from the atmosphere, and then it will be a renewable if successful.
A problem with the energy and climate discussion is the idea that we should have one solution to all our needs. Short
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This is a process that's been going on for Billions of years. It's staggering, the arrogance to think that "humanity" is able to "make a decision" on that scale.
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So long as any of the carbon in the cycle is coming from sources currently in the ground or oceans (e.g. coal, oil, natural gas, or methane clathrates). I.e. we are harvesting energy by oxidizing previously reduced carbon -- it is NOT RENEWABLE or SUSTAINABLE!
Quite right. As I said elsewhere [slashdot.org], it seems a lot of people get caught in some sort of logical error wrt "carbon neutrality".
I understand that we may need to use chemical storage to move energy around and make it useful, but ultimately, we need to reduce our emmissions to less that what the planet can scrub. It makes no difference where it comes from - just that it is less.
This idea seems to defer it a little, but really makes no long term difference, unless the created material is converted into plastic o
Get used to seeing this (Score:2)
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E.g. http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m1141/is_43_38/ai_93084876 [findarticles.com]
also
http://rightweb.irc-online.org/analysis/2003/0312apocalypse.php [irc-online.org]
And since they kowtow to these groups for their own political ends Bush/Cheney in fact *are* evil.
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Please think though what you say sometimes 'kay?
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Not carbon neutral (Score:4, Informative)
In the middle of the process there's a small C02 -> CO ->CO2 stage.
Probably better to use all those mirrors to heat some water and drive a turbine.
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Probably better to use all those mirrors to heat some water and drive a turbine.
This may not be the case. Solar traditionally does fairly poorly in thermal systems because of how spread out the energy is. Focusing the energy to yield a higher temperature is possible only with huge arrays of precision mirrors. And without the high temperatures, the thermal to mechanical efficiency must suck at least as much as the Carnot efficiency [wikipedia.org].
In contrast, the light-driven chemical reaction is NOT limited by Carnot, but of course has its own efficiency associated with it. It depends very much
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A New Kind of Cracker (Score:4, Informative)
Now I'd release the oxygen since atomic oxygen is the most corrosive element on the table, recover the graphite and sell it off.'
This would give the high polluting coke refineries something to grieve about since this would put a ding in their profits.
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Govt science at work (Score:2, Interesting)
The russians used a pencil
much more productive to focus on using less energy in the 1st place, in terms of energy saved/research dollar
these tech fixes are really obscuring the problem: our basic life style is not good. the govt should stop building highways, put money and tax incentives to get homes and jobs at mass transit accessible sites; just getting one or two million people out of suburbs into nyc lifesytles would do more for the envir
Urban myth (Score:5, Informative)
Claim: NASA spent millions of dollars developing an "astronaut pen" which would work in outer space while the Soviets solved the same problem by simply using pencils.
Status: False.
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The russians used a pencil
I'll let someone else correct your misapprehension on this issue.
just getting one or two million people out of suburbs into nyc lifesytles would do more for the enviroment then a million years of Rnd
What about those people who just don't want to live in a city? I don't: I grew up in a small town and would be abjectly miserable living in a city. Offer all the tax incentives you want and I would still never
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Then their fuel bills go up, like they've been doing. Which is fine if you have the money. Just don't expect me to sympathize too much.
What bugs me is all the preachy "green" types who whine about any attempt to build housing with more than a few stories. David Owen covered the topic very well here:
NYC is the Greenest City in America [walkablestreets.com]
Wrong. (Score:2)
Coming up with a pressurized ball-point mine and optimizing it to make it feasable and 'certified for flight' costed only about 100.000$. Paying the team, building the prototypes, testing them NASA-style, building the tools and rigging a new assembly line for something like that costs that much. Fairly cheap considering they ditched the ball-point pens biggest downside: Unable to write overhead, under water or - as the case may be - in zero g
Summary a bit too rosy ... (Score:4, Informative)
They're leaving the production of actual liquid fuel to other people
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More steps, more energy loss (Score:3, Insightful)
In the best case it takes as much energy to break the CO2 bonds as you get from generating the CO2, in reality it will take much more.
Same process as wood gasification? (Score:3, Interesting)
solar fuel is the way to go (Score:2)
The technique most people are using is based on titanium dioxide catalysis in UV light. Japan is crazy for this stuff. It oxidizes pollution, makes it easier to clean buildings and windows and breaks water into oxygen and hydrogen (it's also in paint and sunscreen). It also can convert (reduce) CO2 into alcohols or methane in the right
Old Technology (Score:3, Funny)
Why not nuclear rather than solar? (Score:2)
Using solar power to generate the heat introduces a lot of practical problems to overcome such as space for the solar reflectors, dependence on time of day and weather and other issues. It seems that a compact nuclear re
Long-Term Solution for Aircraft Fuels (Score:2)
Turning Up the Heat on Solar (Score:2)
If it's really a heat engine, then it might be powered better by something other than sunlight. Sunlight does offer an average (across night/season/weather/latitude) of about 400W:m^2 in North America, but this machine will consume quite a lot of energy to produce and maintain, while consuming area that could deliver more energy in direct power from the sunlight than what it stores in "reformed CO2". Which eith
Amazing! (Score:5, Funny)
I saw something like this before! (Score:2)
Brett
This vs biofuels, sustainability & how to do i (Score:5, Interesting)
Regarding the "They're leaving the production of actual liquid fuel to other people
Regarding the "Renewable not!" comment [slashdot.org] and using power-plant flue gas CO2 as the input to this process, this would indeed not be sustainable. However, if industrial capture of CO2 from the air [columbia.edu] is available, one can fully close the loop and have a sustainable hydrocarbon fuel cycle. Flue gas CO2 could be a good option in the short term, however. For instance, if solar and other nearly-carbon-free energy sources begin to rapidly take over, coal plants will not immediately be shut down. Other CO2-emitting industrial plants such as aluminum smelters, etc, will also have CO2 emissions to deal with, and this form of using it to store non-fossil energy by recycling it once as a liquid fuel would be worthwhile. One comment [slashdot.org] discussed this transition well.
Related, other comments [slashdot.org] say "why not just use the solar energy to produce electricity". These intermittent resources need storage, and liquid fuel storage is not a bad method (and very versatile). Others responded [slashdot.org] about storage.
So, processes like this are a way to store non-fossil energy as a convenient energy-dense fuel which can be used in our existing petroleum fuel infrastructure and vehicles (as opposed to hydrogen and batteries). Biofuels can do the same, and there are many comments above ("I saw something like this... it's called a tree") mentioning biofuels and how this process replicates it with much more complexity; indeed you could call this whole process including the Fischer-Tropsch fuel synthesis "artificial photosynthesis". However, this process cuts out the middle-man of the plant in biofuels processes, which has much lower sunlight-to-fuel efficiency than industrial solar collectors (PV or thermal) and requires a lot of fertilizers and pesticides to boost growth rate. Such land- and resource-intensive agriculture is not sustainable [sciencemag.org] in its current form and may not ever be on the scale we will need it.
TFA discusses a solar-heat-driven thermochemical process that has potential. A somewhat similar solar-heat thermolytic process splits CO2 directly [www.lare.us] at higher temperatures. There are many other methods of accomplishing this that are at different levels of development and being researched, including electrochemical (pdf link1 [risoe.dk], pdf link2 [confex.com]), photoelectrochemical, photo(bio)chemical...
Grampa's biotech solution (Score:5, Funny)
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I am referring to the massive subsidies received by the corn farmers in the USA and the sugar beet farmers in Europe.
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Re:This is (Score:5, Informative)
Recycling CO2 (Score:2)
Fuel made by this, when burned, releases the CO2 back into the atmosphere. I suppose the only reason they talk about doing it on coal plants is because the concentration of CO2 is higher where it's being used. However, as usual there's no way that the energy input is equal to the energy in the fuel, so what is the point? If you put that solar electricity on the grid, you need to burn that much less *actual* oil, so you have no
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Well technically it does, it's just that burning it puts it back into the atmosphere. Anybody who feels strongly enough could bury it instead.
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Personally, I'll worried more about the production rate of 2.5 gal of fuel p
Re:What could possibly go wrong... (Score:4, Informative)
BTW, chemical plants have a lot more nasty compounds than CO.
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Yeah, because everyone knows that it isn't possible to make a CO detector.
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A friend of mine used to work for the old Baxter-Travenol pharmaceutical operation. In the building he worked in, he said that a few floors up was a facility that was making intermediate compounds (amines, I believe he said, but this was twenty-odd years ago so my memory could be faulty) used in the production of certain drugs. This was a complete