MIT Engineers Design Engine That Converts Heat To Electricity With Over 40% Efficiency (technologyreview.com) 117
Engineers at MIT and the National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL) have designed a heat engine with no moving parts. It converts heat to electricity with over 40% efficiency -- making it more efficient than steam turbines, the industrial standard. MIT Technology Review reports: The invention is a thermophotovoltaic (TPV) cell, similar to a solar panel's photovoltaic cells, that passively captures high-energy photons from a white-hot heat source. It can generate electricity from sources that reach 1,900 to 2,400C -- too hot for turbines, with their moving parts. The previous record efficiency for a TPV cell was 32%, but the team improved this performance by using materials that are able to convert higher-temperature, higher-energy photons. The researchers plan to incorporate the TPV cells into a grid-scale thermal battery. The system would absorb excess energy from renewable sources such as the sun and store that energy in heavily insulated banks of hot graphite. Cells would convert the heat into electricity and dispatch it to a power grid when needed.
The researchers have now successfully demonstrated the main parts of the system in small-scale experiments; the experimental TPV cells are about a centimeter square. They are working to integrate the parts to demonstrate a fully operational system. From there, they hope to scale up the system to replace fossil-fuel plants on the power grid. Coauthor Asegun Henry, a professor of mechanical engineering, envisions TPV cells about 10,000 feet square and operating in climate-controlled warehouses to draw power from huge banks of stored solar energy.
The researchers have now successfully demonstrated the main parts of the system in small-scale experiments; the experimental TPV cells are about a centimeter square. They are working to integrate the parts to demonstrate a fully operational system. From there, they hope to scale up the system to replace fossil-fuel plants on the power grid. Coauthor Asegun Henry, a professor of mechanical engineering, envisions TPV cells about 10,000 feet square and operating in climate-controlled warehouses to draw power from huge banks of stored solar energy.
Really? (Score:4, Informative)
By way of comparison, 40% is the thermal efficiency of a diesel engine.
While the MIT review claims that 40% efficiency is more than a steam turbine, this site [lambdageeks.com] says otherwise. And this one [wikipedia.org] also claims steam turbines can reach 50% efficiency as well.
And should I mention GE sells gas turbines for power generation with 64 percent efficiencies [ge.com]?
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Re:Really? (Score:4, Insightful)
Short answer - no.
This scheme is designed to work with a source at 1900-2400C; that's practical in a purpose-built solar thermal plant, say, but if your radioactive waste gets that hot the neighbours will definitely complain.
Re:Really? (Score:5, Funny)
If your waste gets that hot, then it isn't waste. It is still fuel.
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That is silly and not funny.
Fission products after a Uranium atom got split: are waste. And not fuel, and they are the ones that produce the dangerous heat. Most of the "waste" is not fuel anyway but unfissionable inert Uranium.
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Fuel is just something that can produce useful energy. So if your "waste" is getting to 2000 Kelvin then it is actually still "fuel" in the broader sense, because 2000 Kelvin is most definitely at the point where you can easily turn that heat into useful energy.
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"Fuel is just something that can produce useful energy" ... by burning it. Fuel is not simply anything that produces "useful energy" nor is it clear why "useful" is in your definition.
Is Lava "fuel"? Does it not "produce useful energy" according to your definition?
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Hot lava is fuel if you have a thing in place that can take that heat and convert it to something useful.
Fuel is something (anything) that the method you're using can accept an convert into something useful.
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Fuel cells don't burn their fuel.
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They do. That is why they are called that way. :P
Typical fuel cells, use either H2 and O2 to create water, burning the H2, or Ethanol (C2H5-OH) with Oxygen. Burning the Ethanol in that process. There are plenty of others. One element gets oxidyzed, with: oxygen. We call that "burning" as laymen
Re: Really? (Score:2)
We call it burning if there's a flame, which there is not in a fuel cell.
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Then you should get an update in physics? Or not?
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Yeah I'm thinking no need. Especially if you're trying to tell me that there's a flame inside a fuel cell.
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Especially if you're trying to tell me that there's a flame inside a fuel cell.
Sorry to bring it to you: you are an idiot
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You could.
But no one is building a "give us some radioactive waste" and "we make energy from it, reactors."
That would be an RTG https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
Not super efficient, not really worth the money and the hassle and the risk.
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It's not at all clear that RTGs are the only thing that could take radioactive "waste" and extract energy from it. Any heat exchanger could probably do that. Whether it's worthwhile is a separate question.
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Of course every heat converter could do that.
I was probably mind locked in "nuclear plant" and that is why I picked RTG.
Re: Really? (Score:3)
I do not think that was meant to be funny or silly. It was actually rather insightful. I think what's pretty incredible is that you completely fail to understand the fundamental truth in that post.
If a fishing breakdown product is emitting this much heat, it's clearly undergoing further fishing, which makes it a potentially usable source of energy. Provided the reactor setup is appropriate for the sequence, there's no reason to stop using an energy-generating mix, when it is not uranium.
I have to conclude t
Re: Really? (Score:5, Funny)
If a fishing breakdown product is emitting this much heat, it's clearly undergoing further fishing, which makes it a potentially usable source of energy. Provided the reactor setup is appropriate for the sequence, there's no reason to stop using an energy-generating mix, when it is not uranium.
You're absolutely right. They just need to tuna the reactor a little better and keep the fishing going, for Cod's sake.
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A fishing breakdown is usually the result of the wrong bait being employed in my experience. Try using live bait and avoid fishing during the heat of the day. Nothing bites then it seems.
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If a fishing breakdown product is emitting this much heat, it's clearly undergoing further fishing,
No it is not. It is just radioactive decay. Obviously you can use that. But getting the decaying fission products out of radioactive waste and then use them again in an RTG makes not much sense: hence no one is doing it.
I have to conclude that either you didn't understand, or you're just trolling against nuclear power.
I understand it very well. You are the troll. Dumbass.
Provided the reactor setup is appropri
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Transporting 2000C radioactive material to the underground bunker might be a problem.
There's bound to be some neighbors along the way.
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Considering nuclear enrichment plants for nuclear power are not on-site at the power plant already, this is already a solved problem. Storing fuel rods separately shielded keeps the temperature way down until it goes into the reactor and gets near other fuel rods.
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You literally made up every point in your post.
"If they work at lower temperatures" - very unlikely
(If they could build them into combustion engines.) - wow, we'll just slip this under the hood?
"If that heat could be cheaply harvested and stored in a battery" - and what is your ICE vehicle going to do with that stored electricity?
Then "CO2 emissions could drop by half or more" - no, you'll have the same amount of CO2 emissions, because you are burning the same amount of fuel, your ICE will be capturing wast
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No.
As the heat is not moved away.
to have a cooling effect you have to move heat from one point to the other. So the point you move it away from gets colder.
And if I should nitpick more: electricity is not energy. It is moving electrons. If you really want to anti nitpick me: then the electrons have a kinetic energy - which would be: energy. The real trick about moving electrons is their charge, so you can generate magnetic field with them. Hence electric engines etc.
Electricity is not really complex, but to
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No, they wont ... an Endothermic reaction is a chemical reaction, has absolutely nothing to do with Thermodynamics,
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Not waste, but Fusion (Score:2)
The problem of disposing the radioactive waste from conventional nuclear power installations is that the stuff creates heat
True, but unless things go very, very wrong i.e. there is a meltdown that stored waste never reaches the 1,900-2,400C temperatures that this needs to generate power. However, since the system needs these temperatures and works off radiated energy it might be great for extracting power from a future fusion reactor where the temperatures are high and the plasma is magnetically contained in a vacuum vessel.
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Re: Really? (Score:2)
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Umm... we've been launching radioactive material in space for some time now. IIRC, we launched a radioisotope thermoelectric generator into space on a satellite all the way back in 1961.
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Actually, the half life of Pu-238 isn't all that long. Several Voyager (can't recall which or both) instruments have been shut down, some just last month, because the power production has dwindled and is insufficient to keep them going.
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It is basically a photovoltaic cell that needs to absorb photons in that "heat spectrum": so no.
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That 64% is combined cycle efficiency, it is not a single engine, and engine efficiency is temperature dependent. At the stated temperatures, this TPVs maximum equivalent efficiency is approximately 1 - 300 Kelvin / 2900 Kelvin = 90%
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It's going to lose at round trip efficiency relative to a thermal storage system using a combine cycle power plant, that's all that really matters.
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And should I mention GE sells gas turbines for power generation with 64 percent efficiencies [ge.com]?
That is about the efficiency of a fuel cell and double the efficiency of some older generators.
So why aren't these deployed more widely?
These turbines may be a much wiser and faster investment to reduce CO2 than wind and solar since they could be deployed at scale at much lower cost.
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These turbines may be a much wiser and faster investment to reduce CO2 than wind and solar since they could be deployed at scale at much lower cost.
The problem is the pay-back period for these investments tends to be decades. There's some risk in a business model that relies on burning fossil fuels in the 2040s and beyond.
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The risk is political - politicians letting "the perfect" get in the way of the "good enough".
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Oddly, many analysts think Vlad is making more money than before, and oil production hasn't been reduced in any significant measure. The current issue is all the "nice" countries scrambling to buy non-Russian oil, driving up world oil prices, and "bad" nations are now buying all the Russian oil they can get at slightly elevated prices, due to world market.
Biden is asking non-Russian oil producers outside the US to increase production to drive down world oil prices, this is a self-imposed price hike that is
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They are. It's the reason that coal has been on the slide since fracked gas became a thing in the USA. Even if you got rid of all the environmental restrictions on coal, it simply cannot compete with a combined cycle gas turbine power station on cost. At that point you either have to subsidise coal or put restrictions on CCGT both of which are "un-american". The result is that coal power plants close for cheaper to run natural gas power CCGT power plants.
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The coal plant you own is cheaper than the gas turbine plant you have to buy/build.
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Combined-cycle gas turbine generators ARE being built and deployed widely. They burn gas and emit CO2 and add to climate change. They're the anonymous grey buildings with a funny-looking exhaust stack close to a grid interconnector that keeps the lights on when the Green wind turbines and solar panels that get all the public attention don't generate much electricity (which is a lot of the time).
There are modern coal-fired power plants that can manage up to 46% efficiency, so-called ultra-supercritical boile
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CCGT plants aren't used to "back" renewables, they're one of several methods of generating electricity to meet demand and in many places the principal method.
Thermal efficiency of CCGT plants is around 60% once they're up to temperature -- the hot exhaust gases from the ca. 45-50% efficient turbine are used to raise steam to drive a small steam turbine to generate "extra" electricity. That's a lot better efficiency than the best coal-fired plants.
it's easy to pipe gas from producer plants direct to a CCGT
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I don't design power infrastructure so I have to defer to my friends who do this for a living. When he designs a wind/solar installa
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That's odd. Here in the UK the few open-cycle gas plants left in service only get run for a few hours a year, to test them and keep them operational just in case they're needed because of grid trips or loss of other generating plant. In contrast to open-cycle generators we've got about 32GW of CCGT capacity with some more being built. Some times in winter when electricity demand is at its highest, as much as 30GW of that CCGT capacity can be online at one time.
Open-cycle generators produce less electricity
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Because it is not the turbine that has 64%, but a combined cycle gas plant that has 64%.
The turbine is around 42% - just like any other turbine on the planet.
Re: Really? (Score:2)
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The radioactive material (Plutonium) in those deep space satellites is nowhere near hot enough for this technology.
Re:Really? (Score:5, Informative)
By way of comparison, 40% is the thermal efficiency of a diesel engine.
40% is the peak theoretical efficiency of a fully modern road-going diesel engine at peak efficiency, which is only ever achieved while cruising in the "sweet spot [fleetequipmentmag.com]". And you can consistently do that only while cruising on flat ground.
In actual practice a diesel is more commonly at around 20% efficiency, which is why electric motors just slaughter them (at 95%+ efficiency for all current EV motors, even while regenerating.)
The most efficient-while-cruising diesel engines reach 50% efficiency or thereabouts, but they are in container ships. You can't make a small diesel that efficient.
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I'm sure faster than that with a battery swap.
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It's 43.3% simple cycle.
64% is combined cycle after waste heat is shunted through a steam turbine. Good engineering will account for this but let's compare just oranges.
https://www.ge.com/gas-power/p... [ge.com]
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That is not the efficiency of the gas turbine. A gas turbine is around 42%, just like a steam turbine. It is a
">64%
Net combined-cycle efficiency
That means it is used in "combined cycle" gas plant where the first stage is a gas turbine (or several) and the exhaust (and potentially additional gas burned) is used to heat a steam turbine.
Let me guess... (Score:2, Informative)
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It's when you least expect it, with little to no media fanfarre, such as with everything that was developed during your lifetime, including the blue leds behind your screen and the several improvements to materials used in your everything.
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Perfect timing! Should be just about ready for fusion, then.
That joke is getting a bit old. Fusion has been right around the corner since the 1950s.
Why not just use it for a solar panel? (Score:2)
Why not just use it as a solar panel? It's substantially more efficient than current photovoltaics and gets better, rather than worse, as it gets hotter.
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It's substantially more efficient than current photovoltaics and gets better, rather than worse, as it gets hotter.
a) t's substantially more efficient than current photovoltaics actually it is not. Efficiency in this context means: how much of the input do you get out as useable output. As this "thermo-photovoltaic" is only using a small spectrum - albeit with 40% efficiency - it produces less power than a "normal-photovoltaic" cell, that uses a different spectrum, with 25% efficiency.
b) it does not get bet
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Not so, as I read it. They start with a surface that is heated by the incoming infrared. But this surface is paved with a structure of
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Use mirrors to focus sunlight on one of these till the surface heat reaches 2000 degrees, ... same question. Then explain to us why we should ignore this tech and continue burning coal.
False. Fucking. Dichotomy.
Slashdot needs to turn off anonymous comments again. They are worse than worthless.
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Which doesn't mean your idea is without merit, I just think these would be better used for reducing the amount of waste heat generated by certain industries. Greenhouse gasses would be less of a concern if we generated le
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Your approach would take solar energy (heat) that could be reflected back into space and dumps 60% of it in to the environment.
And current solar panels take solar energy (heat) that could be reflected back into space and dump about 80% of it into the environment.
This way you'd get about twice as much power into the wires (where, in either case, it also eventually ends up as heat, but after doing something useful.) One way to look at it is that, for a given amount of power delivered, you do less than half a
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Then explain to us why we should ignore this tech and continue burning coal.
Are those the only two choices? Really? Please, grow up.
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You'd need a lot of mirrors to focus sunlight onto a surface to generate that kind of temperature. And that kind of temperature near the roof of a house is...dangerous.
Pfft, amateurs (Score:2)
Glorious Soviet technology developed Ural truck, converting fuel to heat with 100% efficiency!
Might be interesting for RTGs (Score:4, Interesting)
Current RTGs use Peltier elements with a conversion efficiency of about 5%.
The MIT article lists 40%, at a temperature of 2400 C, up from a previous record of 32% at a lower temperature. As far as I know, the junction temperature in the Voyager RTGs is 1000 C.
Wikipedia [wikipedia.org] quotes 35% at 1770 K, which works out to 25% at 1270 K/1000 C.
Lifetime, materials, difficulty to make? (Score:3)
All suspiciously absent. Other than that, pretty cool research. Probably nothing will come from it, but that is not absolutely certain.
Metals melt below that.. (Score:2)
Tldr; Wondered if you could put these in a steel foundry but the melting point of most metals is below 1900C. White hot radiation starts at 1315C though. I'm wondering how they keep the things from melting! They need to be near a white hot energy source.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
Seems a strange use to envision. (Score:2)
Climate controlled how, to match Mercury's? These cells are optimized for temperatures between "1,900 and 2,400 C"! And why store solar heat if there is a heating problem? Wouldn't it make more sense to wrap very hot things in these cells, like furnaces at steel mills (which still aren't hot enough)? How about using it to reduce the heat we generate by 40% instead o
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Reduce the difference in temperature between the heat source and the heat sink, and you're guaranteed to reduce efficiency.
I dream of... (Score:2)
I dream of a cell like that that works with temperatures in the 27Â C and higher and generates energy while cooling that air a couple of degrees. The generated electricity moves a fan, and bum! Free air conditioning. Always hoping.
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You might get a few microwatts out of that.
So, static geothermal is now possible? (Score:2)
Nice, if true.
Why make one that big? (Score:2)
So, it works at small scale. Why automatically make the jump to grid scale when you could probably make the jump to house-size scale much faster and easier? Or are they worried that nobody will buy it?
2k C batteries? (Score:2)
That's some pretty warm graphite. I got to wondering a few things.
First, what does the black body radiation curve look like at 2,000 degrees? Specifically, what frequency is most of the energy radiated at? I never took thermo or that level of physics so I don't know how to figure it out.
Second, I sure hope the chip doesn't have to be at that temperature. That would take some seriously exciting solder joints.
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I suspect the chip must not be at that temperature, thus making impossible some of the crazy ideas posted here like putting them down a borehole into the Earth's mantle.
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If countries don't stop subsidizing solar, there's going to be a lot of periods with negative energy prices.
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Wow, but that is superb!
You can charge your EV for free, and even get paid!
Dumbass!
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Finally, a use for all those crypto-miners! J/k this will never happen.
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I *think* they're talking about solar mirror farms to create the heat.
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You want to tap into 2,000 degree Celsius steam from the earths core?
That's a bad idea. Perchance, once that 2,000 degree Celsius steam does its thing generating electricity, where does the steam go? How hot is it after processing? Any chance that steam may cause global warming as the ambient temperature around the exhaust pipe hovers around 500-1,000 degrees Celsius?
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The geothermal heat is really difficult to extract. Most geothermal plants are not profitable.
Solar heat is (at the surface of the earth) too diffuse to be profitable for much more than heating water to "very warm". You can build mirrors to concentrate it, use those to heat something, and then use that something as a heat source. This makes the solar more energy more persistently reliable, but it raises the cost.
This particular approach seems to require an intense enough source of heat for neither of tho
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I've seen lots of holes drilled in the ground, but I've never seen superheated steam coming out of them. Ground water that hot is found near the surface in only a few places on Earth, most of them several miles under the ocean.
And this device doesn't use superheated steam, it needs temps of around 2000 degrees F, well above the Triple Point of water. That temp is found near the boundary between the upper and lower mantle, around 400 miles (660 km) deep. The deepest well ever drilled is about 8 miles (12