Organism Uses Solar Energy to Produce Hydrogen 58
Stan Freeman writes "CNET is
reporting that Stanford University researchers have discovered a soil
microorganism that splits water into hydrogen and oxygen. They are trying
to adapt this naturally occurring anaerobic organism into one that can survive
in a more normal environment. There is some
more information on biological
water splitting here
on the National Renewable Energy Laboratory's (NREL) web site."
Err (Score:5, Informative)
Here it is [com.com].
First post?
Scientific American Frontiers (Score:1)
Not that impressive (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Not that impressive... Oh, I thought it said... (Score:2)
out of the corner of my eye...
(No, I am not implying that an orgasm produces hydrogen out of the corner of my eye, either...)
it will eat all the water (Score:5, Funny)
Cost measurements? (Score:3, Insightful)
* What is included in the cost measures?
* Do these costs represent capital costs or recurring costs?
* Is the cost per unit biomass (food) at market rates?
* What temperature band does this work under?
* Please cite patent numbers for those granted so we may link to them?
* When you cite, "maximal theoretical electron transport rate" is this presuming some currently unavailable technology or the maximal rate you ran your demonstration at?
* Are you using expensive fuel cell membranes, and if so, is the capital cost of these counted in?
* Are you factoring in any losses due to leakage, probable losses of uptime to the facility from maintenance required by your technology, etc.?
Gotta be exact here, we're a tough crowd for 'free energy' stories, we've seen too many of them...
Re:Cost measurements? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Cost measurements? (Score:4, Insightful)
Especially if the organism is photosynthetic (like the algae they mention). Add water, carbon, nitrate sources, and plenty of sunlight. And the organisms are easily transportable (unlike a bulky solar panel).
Re:Cost measurements? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Cost measurements? (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Cost measurements? (Score:3, Informative)
And if possible put the replies here
great .. (Score:3, Funny)
Re:great .. (Score:1)
Evolution already took care of the problem... the critter gets out of hand producing too much oxygen, it dies in its own poisons before turning the planet into a steaming cinder.
To get around this problem, the researchers produce millions of the bugs and expose them to a low concentration of oxygen. They then take the ones that survive and use them to parent a new gen
Re:great .. (Score:1)
if it goes 'oops... never mind', i say kill it. if all we get to is 'oops...', then clearly it has killed us.
Great DIY project! (Score:1)
* Evil Genius School alumni only
Re:great .. (Score:3, Funny)
Ok, you receive 10 geek demerits.
Go directly outside, do not play go, do not collect 200 quatloos.
The correct geek referrence is ugly bag of mostly water.
-
How will this work? (Score:2)
Re:How will this work? (Score:2, Insightful)
YTKNATHD (Score:1)
You Too Know Nothing About The Hindenberg Disaster.
Not only the distaster was the US's machination, but the deceased were... how many would you say? A ridiculous 36%! That is a survival rate of over 60% in an extremely dangerous situation in which the hydrogen US embargo put the ship in. Even in those circumstances, I'd take that over any modern air crash.
YMNRTYUDS.
You May Now Return To Your Usual Disinformation Sources.
Flood control (Score:1)
Oxygen contamination? (Score:2)
Re:Oxygen contamination? (Score:4, Informative)
they have two methods, one cycles the organism in a soup between two fermentation tanks, one enriched in sulfur the other deficient in sulfur. They are trying to engineer an algae that has a form of hydrogenase that does not break down immediately in the presence the oxygen it produces and they have are also tweaking the genes of the algae so it will produce the gas in one tank and get shuttled to the other tank, where the different nutrients allow it to recover for another go-round. The bug should work anaerobically in the sulfate tank producing hydrogen gas there, then photosynthetically in the unsulfered tank, recharging. Net oxygen production occurs in the photosynthetic phase, a separate tank from hydrogen production: the O2 and the H2 are never mixed to begin with Well, thats the theory anyway...can't you read?
Re:Oxygen contamination? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Oxygen contamination? Why not just (Score:2)
Re:Oxygen contamination? (Score:3, Interesting)
You have a point here...we are pretty much just going on pictures here and the arrows seem to indicate that O2 is both emitted and consumed in roughly equal amounts. Its not clear that oxygen is a byproduct in the sulfate stage. Numbers would be helpful.
I'm not always that condescending and I regret the tone of my reply.
I'm not a chem. engineer but what little I know about fuel cells leads me to expect that it IS necessa
Re:Oxygen contamination? (Score:2)
Re:Oxygen contamination? (Score:2)
oh boy.... (Score:2, Funny)
DROUGHT
with the usually plot line; older scientist's manipulating the DNA of the organism results in disaster. Enter the late 20's, early 30's young male prodigy who saves the day, along with the help of the older scientist's 20-something daughter. BTW, the old fart dies.
Re:oh boy.... (Score:1)
Re:oh boy.... (Score:1)
Do Hydrogen Cars Generate More CO2 Per Mile? (Score:4, Interesting)
This process produces "7.05 kg CO2 ... per [1.0] kilogram hydrogen".
Now new cars are getting near 140.9 [grams] C02 [per kilometer] [www.acea.be] (This is a target, double it if you want)
So, how many KGs of Hydrogen does a Hydrogen powered car need per mile? Multiply x7.05kg to get emissions based on current production technologies.
Are these hydrogen cars poisoning the planet? With a 500 km (310 miles) range, a gas powered car at the target level could sequester and store about 70 kgs (154 pounds) of CO2.
If gas stations were required to accept and sequester this CO2, we could effectively eliminate CO2 emissions from most new automobiles without criss crossing the world with Hydrogen delivery lines or developing a totally new CO2 free hydrogen creation system.
Just capture 50% of CO2 emissions and you'll be doing quite fine as far as cutting emissions goes.
Capturing CO2 (Score:2, Informative)
You can't release it into the atmosphere: Global climate change.
You can't really sink it under the ocean without some significant consequnces. (People have proposed this a number of times, but it's still a bad idea.)
I'm not sure how much CO2 coca-cola uses each year, but I doubt it's THAT much.
Why not just look for a solution that doesn't generate CO2?
Hence, use biocatalysis to perform the hydrolysis by extracting out the
Re:Capturing CO2 (Score:1)
A few tens of kg of nitrogenase (the enzyme in nitrogen-fixing bacteria and algae) have effects of the same order of magnitude as all the energy-intensive Haber-Bosch fertilizer facilities around the world. So people have been thinking for decades about turning that into a nice industrial process. Imagine blowing air across a membrane loaded with enzyme a
Re:Capturing CO2 (Score:1)
Still, I am aware of some very intresting (although preliminary) data involving Nitrogenases from R. palustris that are showing some si
Re:Do Hydrogen Cars Generate More CO2 Per Mile? (Score:1, Flamebait)
No, our current economic system is killing the planet. (Don't look at me, I don't have the answer).
New profit center: micro-pharming (Score:2)
Hmmm....run it up to the roof, use the sunlight there, with water from rain, and *grow* stuff in a *controlled environment*. Pharming, in particular, comes to mind: rare high-profit GM'd crops -- say, taxol or various "orphan drug" crops. If that's
This solves the biodiesel dead end? (Score:5, Interesting)
But, U.Wisconsin chem researchers have a chemical [heat and catalysts, not bio-reactors] process that make biodiesel out of cellulose, which is 3/4 of dried plant material by weight [wisc.edu]. This means most of what farms [and cities too, if you count leaves and grass clippings] burn, bury or compost could be feedstock. Study the diagram...the UW process needs an H2 in-feed [it hydrogenates carbon chains to make the diesel, the H2 shown leaving the reactor is a fraction of what goes in]. So their process would be an energy winner if only a source of H2 that does not consume fossil fuel were available .
NREL, Stanford, meet U. Wisconsin. U. Wisconsin, meet Stanford and NREL. if you guys play nice together and don't play politics, maybe my grandchildren won't be bicycling to the library to read about an age when combustible hydrocarbon liquids were used to run selfpropelled vehicles.
I'd love to know exactly how credible the UW claims are. To whet the appetite of chemically knowledgible
I was so tempted to try posting the UW result when it came out but
Re:This solves the biodiesel dead end? (Score:2)
Ok first off it was my understanding that corn was not an ideal plant for
Re:This solves the biodiesel dead end? (Score:1)
Ah, new news! (Score:2)
Salt Water? (Score:3, Interesting)
What's normal? (Score:2)
Peak Oil and the Fate of Humanity (Score:1)
http://www.peakoilandhumanity.com/chapter_choice.
I for one am eager (Score:1)