Archive for Electricity

Mar
26

ZERO EMISSION HYBRID RAILCAR

Posted by: cliveh | Comments (0)

Ultra Light Rail – the Fast Track to Fuel Cells

Introducing Fuel Cells to the Commercial Public Transport Market

Fuel cells are now recognised as a key technology in the process of weaning the modern world from its dependence on fossil fuels and leading it into a new age of alternative energy. The principal obstacle still to be overcome is the high cost of fuel cells. In transport, for example, one kilowatt from a fuel cell costs around $3,000, compared with $30 per kilowatt for an internal combustion engine. Somehow a reduction of two orders of magnitude has to be achieved if fuel cells are to compete with alternatives in the commercial market for transport.

There are two complementary approaches to achieving this reduction. The first and most obvious is to increase the efficiency of the fuel cell in producing electricity from hydrogen. But producing electricity is not an end in itself. It is rather a means to enable us to achieve the end objective, which is to provide people with useful services such as heat, light and mobility. The cost of mobility can therefore be reduced just as much by increasing the energy efficiency of the system in which the fuel cell is used, as by increasing the efficiency of the fuel cell itself.

Ultra Light Rail is a transport system designed to eliminate the two orders of magnitude gap between the fuel cell and the internal combustion engine. The first step is to increase the efficiency of the vehicle system in which the fuel cell is used. This can be done in a number of ways but the most dramatic “step change” in energy efficiency can be achieved by using a vehicle running with steel wheels on steel rails. This immediately reduces the energy requirement by a factor of three, since the lower rolling resistance allows a tram to use only one third of the energy required by a similar sized bus.

Further cost reductions in the vehicle system can be achieved by introducing an on-board energy storage system in a hybrid electric drive train, similar, in principle, to that used in the Toyota Prius and other cars and even in some buses. This makes possible a lower rating for the prime on-board power source which is required only to run at its optimum level, in order to keep the energy storage system topped up. It also allows for the energy from braking to be recaptured and used, rather than dissipated in heat vented to the atmosphere. Still more efficiency can be introduced by integrating the electric motors into the wheels. The overall weight of the vehicle can be reduced by each of these innovations whilst the body itself can be manufactured from carbon fibre composite materials in a monocoque form. The whole process, using standard proven technology, creates a spiralling cost reduction, resulting from each innovative feature.

Using only some of these features, practical test work carried out by Sustraco Ltd, with support from a Carbon Trust grant, has shown that a 25 kilowatt fuel cell would be sufficient to power a light tram with similar capacity to the fuel cell buses tested in London under the EU’s CUTE programme. These buses have done an invaluable job in demonstrating to the public that fuel cells are no different to internal combustion engines in performance and safety. However the buses themselves are grossly inefficient in commercial terms, costing, as they do, some five times as much as a similar diesel bus and requiring 250 kilowatts fuel cell to operate them. The next logical step in commercialising the operation of fuel cell powered public transport vehicles must therefore be to integrate the fuel cell into an energy efficient tram.

The full report can be found by following this Link.

Popularity: 15% [?]

Kindly provided by Brendan McNamara.  Part of the IAEA Fusion Conf Proceedings at Geneva this Oct.  Basically small fusion reactors are viable now.

Abstract
An important milestone on the Fast Track path to Fusion Power is to demonstrate reliable commercial
application of Fusion as soon as possible. Many applications of fusion, other than electricity production, have already been studied in some depth for ITER class facilities. We show that these applications might be usefully realized on a small scale, in a Multi-Functional Compact Tokamak Reactor based on a Spherical Tokamak with similar size, but higher fields and currents than the present experiments NSTX and MAST, where performance has already exceeded expectations. The small power outputs, 20-40MW, permit existing materials and echnologies to be used. The analysis of the performance of the compact reactor is based on the solution of the lobal power balance using empirical scaling laws considering requirements for the minimum necessary fusion ower (which is determined by the optimized efficiency of the blanket design), positive power gain and constraints on the wall load. In addition, ASTRA and DINA simulations have been performed for the range of the design parameters. Our studies show that increased toroidal field in a spherical tokamak can be possibly achieved by use of commercially available high temperature superconductors. This multi-functional compact reactor will also contribute to the mainstream GW Fusion power concept by providing data on burning plasma, test of diagnostics, remote handling, blanket design and operation, reactor integration etc. In this paper, the motivation for the concept as well as physics and technological challenges of the multi-functional compact reactor are discussed.

Popularity: 23% [?]

Categories : Electricity
Comments (2)

There is strong support in certain circles for relying on the European Union Emissions Trading Scheme (EU-ETS) to internalise the social cost of carbon. It is often acknowledged that the scheme has not so far worked, but argued that it can be broadened and strengthened to make it work. There are many reasons to think that this is a mistake.

This article is also available as a PDF (Acrobat file, e.g. for printing).
Read More→

Popularity: 20% [?]

The old power-station retention concept does require a lot of maintenance work to keep them open.
Long start up times are also an issue particularly if the turbine and the whole of the steam system is cold.
In comparison the engine based local CHP option can operate happily with minimal maintenance and with remote unmanned start up and operation.

The benefits from wind are clear they replace fossil fuel but are not effective as replacement capacity unless linked to a sufficiently large area of the world to ensure some wind all the time. Read More→

Popularity: 7% [?]

By Wayne Boakes

It does not make sense to ignore assets, leaving them idle, collecting dust and slowly degenerating (excuse the pun).  Ask yourself why we spend thousands of pounds on standby generation just to have it lying dormant, gathering dust?   Surely it makes much more sense to generate a profit from at least some of these assets.

With the continued expansion of wind energy the national grid need to increase their ability to cope with power fluctuations.  They are already discussing ways in which they can encourage increased participation in Short Term Operating Reserve (STOR).
What is the solution?  One solution is to increase use of embedded generation

What do we expect from a standby generator?  To run once in a blue moon, start first time, take the entire load thrown at it and to do this without a cough or splutter.  Strangely enough all too frequently the emergency arrives only to find the generator won’t start as the battery is flat or the fuel is not getting through or it fails during the run.  It’s not surprising really.  If the generator was a person and we expected immediate response at premium performance we would do something more that just sit around like some couch potato. We would join a gym, do regular exercise and have regular checks to make sure we were in tip top condition. Read More→

Popularity: 31% [?]