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| Tags: bottom, genius, mad, sea |
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#1
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The Mad Genius from the Bottom of the Sea:
http://www.wired.com/wired/archive/1...ven&topic_set= Forget fusion, cold and hot. This old guy thinks we can provide unlimited energy, accelerate plant growth, generate drinking and irigation water, and provide cheap air conditioning, all by pumping up cold water from the depths of the ocean. Check it out. Louis Savain The Silver Bullet: Why Software Is Bad and What We Can Do to Fix it http://users.adelphia.net/~lilavois/...eliability.htm |
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#2
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In article , Traveler wrote:
: Forget fusion, cold and hot. This old guy thinks we can provide : unlimited energy, accelerate plant growth, generate drinking and : irigation water, and provide cheap air conditioning, all by pumping up : cold water from the depths of the ocean. Check it out. He stole that idea from Arthur C. Clarke, you know. ----- Richard Schultz Department of Chemistry, Bar-Ilan University, Ramat-Gan, Israel Opinions expressed are mine alone, and not those of Bar-Ilan University ----- ". . .Mr Schutz [sic] acts like a functional electro-terrorist who impeads [sic] scientific communications with his too oft-silliness." -- Mitchell Swartz, sci.physics.fusion article |
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#3
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The fresh water is the most plausible feature. The thermo cycle cannot
have an efficiency much over 5%. Why not use the cold water for cooling conventional power plants? Diamond Shoals is only 8 miles from the shelf. It might make sense on the E. Coast in that one location. Pipes draw warm water from the ocean surface and cold water from the seabed. The warm water enters a vacuum chamber and is evaporated into steam that drives an electricity-producing turbine. The cold water condenses the steam back into water for drinking and irrigation. Here, calculate the power required to pump the water: http://www.efunda.com/formulae/fluid...ction.cfm#calc Bret Cahill |
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#4
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Fetching lower temperature cooling water to condense steam isn't worth the
effort. In fact, it would be a negative. The ideal input temperature for a steam generator is the highest at which the water is still a liquid. Phil Weldon "Bret Cahill" wrote in message oups.com... The fresh water is the most plausible feature. The thermo cycle cannot have an efficiency much over 5%. Why not use the cold water for cooling conventional power plants? Diamond Shoals is only 8 miles from the shelf. It might make sense on the E. Coast in that one location. Pipes draw warm water from the ocean surface and cold water from the seabed. The warm water enters a vacuum chamber and is evaporated into steam that drives an electricity-producing turbine. The cold water condenses the steam back into water for drinking and irrigation. Here, calculate the power required to pump the water: http://www.efunda.com/formulae/fluid...ction.cfm#calc Bret Cahill |
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#5
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Not just Carnot cycle (efficiency = (T2 -T1) / T2), but all heat engine
cycles are more efficient with a cooler heat sink (T1). Even nukes lose power output in the summer. Bret Cahill |
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#6
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No, a wrong application. A steam turbine operates on the Rankine Cycle, and
can't reach the efficiency theoretically possible by the Carnot Cycle. There is a phase change involved. PWR and BWR fission reactors are cooled by water. Once steam condenses, further lowering the water temperature would require addittional energy at the other end to generate high pressure steam. One technique used for steam generation is to use waste heat to PREHEAT water before generating steam. The only benefit for lower temperature cooling water for steam condensation would be to reduce the needed flow rate. The pebble bed helium working fluid fission reactor would use Brayton Cycle turbines, as there would be no phase change. One thing to keep in mind that engineering and economic compromises must be made. For example, there is a limt to how many pressure stages would be practical for a turbine. Material strength and corrosion resistance are also limiting factors. Try http://www.energy.qld.gov.au/infosit..._turbines.html for more information. Phil Weldon "Bret Cahill" wrote in message oups.com... Not just Carnot cycle (efficiency = (T2 -T1) / T2), but all heat engine cycles are more efficient with a cooler heat sink (T1). Even nukes lose power output in the summer. Bret Cahill |
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#7
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I remember someone suggesting ammonia to lower the boiling pt. of water
to increase efficiency. A release would have a large kill zone so the idea never caught on. If a fluid boiled at 50 F deep ocean cooling water could make sense. Bret Cahill |
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