Menu

Blog

Archive for the ‘energy’ category: Page 44

Mar 26, 2024

The Dawn of Green Chemistry: Researchers Unveil Tenfold Increase in Reaction Efficiency

Posted by in categories: chemistry, energy, sustainability

Anyone who wants to produce medication, plastics or fertilizer using conventional methods needs heat for chemical reactions – but not so with photochemistry, where light provides the energy. The process to achieve the desired product also often takes fewer intermediate steps.

Researchers from the University of Basel are now going one step further and are demonstrating how the energy efficiency of photochemical reactions can be increased tenfold. More sustainable and cost-effective applications are now tantalizingly close.

Industrial chemical reactions usually occur in several stages across various interim products. Photochemistry enables shortcuts, meaning fewer intermediate steps are required. Photochemistry also allows you to work with less hazardous substances than in conventional chemistry, as light produces a reaction in substances which do not react well under heat. However, to this point there have not been many industrial applications for photochemistry, partly because supplying energy with light is often inefficient or creates unwanted by-products.

Mar 26, 2024

MIT’s Self-Powered Sensor Automatically Harvests Ambient Magnetic Energy

Posted by in categories: electronics, energy

A system designed at MIT could allow sensors to operate in remote settings, without batteries.

MIT researchers have developed a battery-free, self-powered sensor that can harvest energy from its environment.

Because it requires no battery that must be recharged or replaced, and because it requires no special wiring, such a sensor could be embedded in a hard-to-reach place, like inside the inner workings of a ship’s engine. There, it could automatically gather data on the machine’s power consumption and operations for long periods of time.

Mar 24, 2024

Tesla diner, drive-in and Supercharger preparing work on interiors

Posted by in categories: drones, energy

Tesla continues to make progress on its upcoming diner, drive-in theater and Supercharger in Los Angeles, with recent drone footage showing new water runoff infrastructure, preparations for stucco installation on the first-floor walls, and seemingly, materials for the start of some interior construction.

In a drone video update shared by YouTube channel 247Tesla on Sunday, you can see new stacks of sheetrock both inside and outside of entrances to the Tesla diner building, as construction prepares to begin focus on interiors. The video also shows a new rectangular area dug roughly five feet deep into the ground, which the video’s host says will likely be used to control water runoff.

Continue reading “Tesla diner, drive-in and Supercharger preparing work on interiors” »

Mar 24, 2024

Matter_Energy_Information.pdf

Posted by in category: energy

Matter energy and information.


Shared with Dropbox.

Mar 24, 2024

New findings shed light on finding valuable ‘green’ metals

Posted by in categories: energy, sustainability

Research led by Macquarie University sheds new light on how concentrations of metals used in renewable energy technologies can be transported from deep within the Earth’s interior mantle by low temperature, carbon-rich melts.

Mar 24, 2024

Gravity Measurement Based on a Levitating Magnet

Posted by in categories: energy, mapping

A new gravimeter is compact and stable and can detect the daily solar and lunar gravitational oscillations that are responsible for the tides.

Gravity measurements can help with searches for oil and gas or with predictions of impending volcanic activity. Unfortunately, today’s gravimeters are bulky, lack stability, or require extreme cooling. Now researchers have demonstrated a design for a small, highly sensitive gravimeter that operates stably at room temperature [1]. The device uses a small, levitated magnet whose equilibrium height is a sensitive probe of the local gravitational field. The researchers expect the design to be useful in field studies, such as the mapping of the distribution of underground materials.

Several obstacles have impeded the development of compact gravimeters, says Pu Huang of Nanjing University in China. Room-temperature devices generally use small mechanical oscillators, which offer excellent accuracy. However, they are made from materials that exhibit aging effects, so these gravimeters can lose accuracy over time. Much higher stability can be achieved with superconducting devices, but these require cryogenic conditions and so consume lots of power and are hard to use outdoors.

Mar 23, 2024

Researcher invents light switch technology that could revolutionize home electrical systems: ‘Our solution prevents unnecessary use of energy’

Posted by in category: energy

A University of Alberta researcher may have just invented a feature that will make homes more affordable and energy-efficient.

Mar 23, 2024

Wireless EV charging gets the turbo treatment with breakthrough 100kW power transfer — making it as fast as a wired plug

Posted by in categories: energy, innovation

New research could spell the end of awkward, heavy cables.

Mar 22, 2024

Texas firm tops Tesla with innovative solar rooftop solution

Posted by in categories: energy, sustainability

Using LFP batteries, Yotta Energy has eliminated the need to install a separate battery pack and the extra wiring that it needs.

Mar 22, 2024

Energy Department goes all in on clean form of on-demand energy embraced by fossil fuel industry

Posted by in category: energy

Advances in oil and gas drilling have cut costs for a form of clean power that could help replace fossil fuels, according to the Department of Energy.

Now the agency is going all in on geothermal energy, which uses heat from deep within the Earth to produce largely pollution-free electricity.

Page 44 of 368First4142434445464748Last