by Tanada » Mon 19 Dec 2016, 11:47:47
I know there was a thread a while back but it seems to have gotten lost in the various site upgrades over the years. I diligently searched and can no longer find it in the memory banks either in the active forums or in the archives. I might suggest starting a new thread based on the Wikipedia and other articles you can find with internet search engines.
As most members know I am a big believer in 'go with what works' when it comes to energy amongst other things. As such I am a firm believer that Internal Combustion Engines (ICE) are not the end all and be all of technology. This is particularly true when it comes to converting energy sources into useful work.
Steam gets discounted widely by some persons on this website because the system of double expansion cylinder based engines were/are only about 10 percent efficient in converting heat from the fuel source into useful work. This was very well known by the late 1800's and lead to a revolution in how steam power was used. Instead of direct drive steam engines that only return 10 to 25 percent of the heat energy as useful work a system of steam turbines was developed that converts 25-40 percent of the energy into useful work. As such a geared steam turbine or a turbine-electric generator-motor set have pretty close to the same efficiency ratings as you get from ICE motors running through a geared transmission set.
This means that by utilizing the complexity of a steam turbo-alternator and electric drive motors a modern steam plant can run a ship or locomotive or very large vehicle like those mega mover mining trucks with the same fire to wheel efficiency ratings as the best of the ICE motors now on the market.
Unlike an ICE motor a steam firebox doesn't require an ash free low sulfur fuel, it can burn solids, liquids or colloidal fuels with equal efficiency. This opens a whole new range of possible biofuels far beyond the clumsy derivative products of alcohols or vegetable oils.
You can make a colloidal fuel from darn near any biomass from yard waste, farm waste, or industrially from coal dust, woody waste, powdered plastics, extra heavy oils and tars. And colloidal fuels can be shipped by pipeline, stored in tanks like regular liquid fuels and sprayed into fire boxes on both steam equipment like those named above or in industrial or home furnace applications where heated air is the goal.
The Peak Oil crisis is not a lack of energy crisis, it is a lack of imagination used to deal with the peak of oil liquids crisis. We adopted oil because it was more convenient that coal as an energy source from the transportation and acquisition point of view. Colloidal fuels handle the transportation aspect quite nicely. Acquisition of liquid petroleum fuels is becoming more and more difficult every year, hence our turning to fracking and increasingly difficult ultra deep water and ultra cold Arctic sources.
With a modest amount of planning we could get a lot of our primary energy for say electricity from colloidal fuels, both biofuels and wastes. Will we be smart enough to do so? I certainly hope so.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Alfred Tennyson', 'W')e are not now that strength which in old days
Moved earth and heaven, that which we are, we are;
One equal temper of heroic hearts,
Made weak by time and fate, but strong in will
To strive, to seek, to find, and not to yield.