- Joined
- Nov 20, 2013
- Messages
- 5,542 (1.38/day)
- Location
- Kyiv, Ukraine
System Name | WS#1337 |
---|---|
Processor | Ryzen 7 5700X3D |
Motherboard | ASUS X570-PLUS TUF Gaming |
Cooling | Xigmatek Scylla 240mm AIO |
Memory | 4x8GB Samsung DDR4 ECC UDIMM |
Video Card(s) | MSI RTX 3070 Gaming X Trio |
Storage | ADATA Legend 2TB + ADATA SX8200 Pro 1TB |
Display(s) | Samsung U24E590D (4K/UHD) |
Case | ghetto CM Cosmos RC-1000 |
Audio Device(s) | ALC1220 |
Power Supply | SeaSonic SSR-550FX (80+ GOLD) |
Mouse | Logitech G603 |
Keyboard | Modecom Volcano Blade (Kailh choc LP) |
VR HMD | Google dreamview headset(aka fancy cardboard) |
Software | Windows 11, Ubuntu 24.04 LTS |
Just so happened, one of my favorite youtubers posted some stuff for his new project a couple of weeks ago.
Gotta be very interesting to see how this is going to end up. I loved all of his previous DIY turbine projects and all of the fun gimmicky stuff, but this is the whole another level.
The biggest issue with FCs is the complexity/price of hydrogen fuel cells. ATM just a naked 100kW cell costs x10 more than an equivalent automotive lithium battery, and the fuel cost is almost . And while the newer stuff looks good on paper with ~100kg weight at 100-150kW and more compact design, it's gonna get bigger and heavier once you start adding up stuff like uber-heavy hydrogen tank(~50-100kg depending on size), separate big-ass active cooling loop(FC runs very-very hot and requires tons of cooling for consistent operation), pressure reductors, lots of thermal insulation, etc. etc. etc.
It's good for stationary installations, like an emergency power backup (instead of conventional generators), or for hybrid transport (where it's used alongside lithium battery), but on it's own - not so much.
There are some cool cutting-edge compact FCs designed specifically for transport (AIO enclosure w/ integrated water loop and pressure regulators), but those are still a bit far from mass-production.
Tank issues are also in the process of being resolved. Carbon sponge went nowhere, but there are some new developments in MOF-based mesh: same approach but cheaper to produce.
Methane fuel cells can also be used as a transitional measure. It's not carbon-neutral, but much cleaner comparing to internal combustion and can greatly benefit from existing infrastructure. LPG fuel cells are also on the rise, and these can be filled up basically at your nearest gas station (at least in EU and CIS). Power output is much lower, but the convenience factor is the highest of them all.
France - the poster-child for nuclear power - is in the process of downsizing even more. Now they have a plan to reduce nuclear to under 50% by 2025 from current 70% and peak ~80%, which is probably going to happen a lot sooner due to old age.
Gotta be very interesting to see how this is going to end up. I loved all of his previous DIY turbine projects and all of the fun gimmicky stuff, but this is the whole another level.
While the tech is in its infancy, it doesn't matter that much. Even for a foreseeable decade or so you can either use cheap excess power from conventional power plants, or partly offset it by renewables to generate hydrogen. E.g. same approach that's been promised for today's EVs, e.g. using wasted or cheap power to do at least something useful, like satisfy the needs of early adopters.No, will always remain expensive until a method refine it that isn't energy negative is developed. To make hydrogen fuel we're spending 1.x units of fuel to make 1 unit of hydrogen fuel, that even before considering the energy cost from when the hydrogen is refined to when it is in your tank. It is never going to be cheaper than alternatives.
The biggest issue with FCs is the complexity/price of hydrogen fuel cells. ATM just a naked 100kW cell costs x10 more than an equivalent automotive lithium battery, and the fuel cost is almost . And while the newer stuff looks good on paper with ~100kg weight at 100-150kW and more compact design, it's gonna get bigger and heavier once you start adding up stuff like uber-heavy hydrogen tank(~50-100kg depending on size), separate big-ass active cooling loop(FC runs very-very hot and requires tons of cooling for consistent operation), pressure reductors, lots of thermal insulation, etc. etc. etc.
It's good for stationary installations, like an emergency power backup (instead of conventional generators), or for hybrid transport (where it's used alongside lithium battery), but on it's own - not so much.
There are some cool cutting-edge compact FCs designed specifically for transport (AIO enclosure w/ integrated water loop and pressure regulators), but those are still a bit far from mass-production.
Tank issues are also in the process of being resolved. Carbon sponge went nowhere, but there are some new developments in MOF-based mesh: same approach but cheaper to produce.
Methane fuel cells can also be used as a transitional measure. It's not carbon-neutral, but much cleaner comparing to internal combustion and can greatly benefit from existing infrastructure. LPG fuel cells are also on the rise, and these can be filled up basically at your nearest gas station (at least in EU and CIS). Power output is much lower, but the convenience factor is the highest of them all.
At first glance I thought it was gonna be something interesting like BloomBox, but that... That makes little to no sense.... especially after contemplating on the fact that at the endpoint it's not pure H2, but essentially a "watered-down" methane. Just remove the middle man, and it's already much better. EVs are a bit different in this aspect, cause there is an issue of refueling time (faster and cheaper to pump tankfull of H2 than wait several hours near the charging station). For homes and mass consumption - stupid. Just provide incentives for electric heating and call it a day. Even our less than stable govt. managed to put together set of incentives to get people off natural gas(mostly due to shortages and rising prices). Right now according to official stats over 30% of houses have electric heating, and realistically it's a lot more, since the vast majority is moving to hybrid setups (electric heating, but gas-powered boilers and stoves) as a temporary solution on the way to full electric.Hydrogen heated homes under development in the UK.
U.K. Setting Its Sights Too Low for Hydrogen Heating in Homes
The U.K. should move faster to replace gas with hydrogen in domestic heating, as the country’s pipes will be ready to make the switch in just two years, according to the head of a pilot project.www.bloomberg.com
Hydrogen heating campaign launches to promote benefits for UK homes
A hydrogen heating campaign is underway as the UK energy sector strives to make households aware of hydrogen's home heating benefitswww.homebuilding.co.uk
Assuming there'll be any growth at all. After Fukushima incident most governments got an excuse to cancel or indefinitely delay new powerplant constructions (though in most cases it was a rising cost that killed it). The only countries making strides are China, India, and Turkey. Even in US and Russia everything is suspended, and very few reactors that are being built are only there for maintaining some resemblance of balance and offset a dozen closed reactors, while the total generation and nuclear share of it has remained stagnant for over 20 years.if batteries don't advance fast enough I could see hydrogen taking over with the growth of nuclear power.
France - the poster-child for nuclear power - is in the process of downsizing even more. Now they have a plan to reduce nuclear to under 50% by 2025 from current 70% and peak ~80%, which is probably going to happen a lot sooner due to old age.
I remember that one. Apparently they are still actively working on it, but now it's not much of a CFR, but more of a BFR and each iteration it only gets bigger and bigger.Lockheed Martin said about 7 years ago that they would have a fusion reactor within 10 years. I haven't seen anything more on the progress but fusion is definitely the future of electricity generation if they can pull it off.
Lockheed says it'll make a truck-sized fusion reactor within 10 years
Lockheed Martin, the US government's largest contractor, says it has made a technological breakthrough in nuclear fusion power. The breakthrough will apparently allow Lockheed to build a 100-megawatt 'compact fusion reactor' (CFR) that can fit on the back of a truck within 10 years. If Lockheed...www.extremetech.com