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To: Haim R. Branisteanu who wrote (157598)5/8/2020 11:51:09 PM
From: TobagoJack2 Recommendations

Recommended By
Haim R. Branisteanu
marcher

  Respond to of 217542
 
I think <<Lock-downs are degrading the person in isolation's immune system>>

Absolutely agree. I for one must go much easier on the chocolate donut even as a once per week treat, and step up and down the stairs and the hill as exercise starting today. The last 45 days have been terrible for healthful immunity!

It has been amusing and easy to get used to, doing all my favourite tasks by the most natural ways, per daily activity set

1. breakfast in favourite chair by preferred window

2. home-school the Jack after his 30 minutes with activity teacher and another 30 minutes w/ homeroom teacher on Zoom

3. lunch followed by nap

4. 'second' morning post nap, do this that whatever in favourite chair by favourite window, same position until absolutely needing to move

5. nap followed by more favourite chair activities, but with Netflix on as background if Friday through Sunday, and if not, YouTube background on iPad w/ MacBook foreground

The novelty was novel, but destructive to immune system, I realised so especially after teaching the Jack to edit his synopsis on sugar, obesity and health, and what our weekly chocolate donut treat is actually doing to us

6. The virus has been destructive, but maybe some good can come out of it still

I do not normally care for Fickling, but noted below article

bloomberg.com

The Hydrogen Economy's Time Is Approaching

Governments should use some of the trillions marked for post-coronavirus stimulus spending to advance this green technology.

David Fickling9 May 2020, 02:00 GMT+2



More than hot air.

Photographer: Chris Ratcliffe/Bloomberg/Getty Images

David Fickling is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist covering commodities, as well as industrial and consumer companies. He has been a reporter for Bloomberg News, Dow Jones, the Wall Street Journal, the Financial Times and the Guardian.
Read more opinion Follow @davidfickling on Twitter

LISTEN TO ARTICLE
What sort of green stimulus does the world need?

Technologies that reduce carbon emissions are one of the most effective targets for the trillions of dollars of spending tied to coronavirus relief programs, more than 200 central bankers, Group of 20 finance ministers and top academics concluded in a study released this week.

There are three sets of clean power technologies that policymakers can focus on, each at varying stages of development. Most advanced are wind and solar, which are already cheaper to build than conventional energy almost everywhere in the world and in many places are even cheaper than operating existing fossil-fired generators.

The best way for governments to increase the share of wind and solar generation is probably to encourage the build-out of transmission networks and reform power markets to reduce the advantages of fossil fuels, while leaving actual financing and construction to private investors.

Sun Down
Building new renewables is cheaper than fossil-fired power in most major countries
Source: BloombergNEF
Note: Shows the lowest-cost form of solar, which is non-tracking except in the U.S. Based on levelized cost of energy, figures for 2H 2019.

Next there are lithium-ion batteries. These are at an earlier stage of development and not quite competitive with existing technologies. In most places it still costs more to provide peaking power to the electricity grid with a back-up battery than with a gas turbine, and the cost of an electric car is substantially more than a gasoline-driven equivalent.

Even there, though, they’re making inroads: Electric vehicles are far cheaper to operate than conventional ones, and batteries big enough to capture peak evening power demand can already compete with gas when integrated with wind and solar generators. As a result, batteries are well on the way to undercutting conventional technologies by the middle of this decade.

It’s tempting to conclude that the fundamentals for clean energy are so positive that it barely needs support. That overlooks the fact that power generation and passenger cars are a surprisingly small share of the world’s emissions.

If both sectors were fully switched to zero-carbon power tomorrow, we’d still have eliminated only about 40% to 50% of our carbon output. Another 25% comes from land use and agriculture — but the place where governments could make the biggest difference is the 20% of emissions that come from industrial activities.

Glass Half Empty
Completely decarbonizing the electricity and passenger car sectors would still leave about half of global CO2 emissions untouched
Source: IEA, Global Carbon Project
Note: Most figures are for 2017, land use for 2019. GT=gigatonnes, one billion metric tons. "Other" includes residential buildings, commercial and public services, and energy used in mining coal and refining oil.

It’s the third technology that has the most potential here. Green hydrogen — produced by splitting water molecules apart with a renewable-powered electric current — is at a similar stage of development to wind and solar in the mid-2000s.

Hydrogen has potential in an array of industrial uses where traditional renewables are unsuitable, such as steelmaking, cement and heavy trucking. If stored underground, it could even provide back-up power for electricity grids.

BloombergNEF estimates that hydrogen could meet 24% of the world’s energy needs by 2050, with annual sales of $200 billion to $700 billion. At the higher end, that’s almost half the size of the current oil market, where turnover is typically in the region of $1.5 trillion or more a year. 1

There’s just one problem: the vast amount of power needed to produce it. BloombergNEF estimates it would take 31,320 terawatt-hours of electricity to hit its 24% target. That’s more than the roughly 26,000 TWh that the entire world generated from all sources last year, of which just 10,000 TWh came from zero-carbon sources. Wind and solar make up less than 3,000 TWh.

If that seems impossibly ambitious, it’s worth remembering that renewables competing with fossil fuels on cost also seemed pie-in-the-sky until quite recently. Economist Nicholas Stern’s influential 2006 review of climate economics argued it shouldn’t be expected to happen until the 2030s at least.

What changed is the array of government-backed demand-inducing policies through the 2000s and 2010s, which gave strong incentives to build more wind and solar capacity, such as Germany’s feed-in tariffs for solar and the U.S. renewable portfolio standards for wind. These were probably more important than research and development spending in getting renewables off the ground. Once a technology is relatively mature, the best way to bring down costs isn’t to make laboratory breakthroughs, but to just build much bigger factories.

What would such a policy look like for H2? Governments should provide subsidies to bring the cost of green hydrogen below conventional sources of energy. The trucking, steel and cement industries should be given mandates forcing them to switch, say, 30% of production to hydrogen power by 2030. Subsidies over the next decade will need to total $150 billion, according to BloombergNEF — but that’s relatively small in the context of trillions of stimulus spending.



BloombergNEF
If such policies can set green hydrogen on the same virtuous circle of demand increases and cost declines, it will start making inroads into other sectors, such as fertilizer manufacturing, grid energy storage and shipping fuel. It might even offer a way out for the world’s stricken oil companies, whose infrastructure and expertise could be transferred from a sunset industry to a new growth field.

Green hydrogen won’t solve all our problems. In the short term, stimulus money is probably best spent on humdrum activities that get less-skilled labor moving, such as insulating houses and installing them with solar panels. In the long term, though, hydrogen offers a way out of our triple crisis of weak post-coronavirus demand, a foundering energy sector, and climate change.

This year, it’s not impossible that the shortfall of demand and low prices will cause revenues to fall below $1 trillion.



This column does not necessarily reflect the opinion of the editorial board or Bloomberg LP and its owners.

To contact the author of this story:
David Fickling at dfickling@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story:
Matthew Brooker at mbrooker1@bloomberg.net

Before it's here, it's on the Bloomberg Terminal.
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To: Haim R. Branisteanu who wrote (157598)5/9/2020 12:01:17 AM
From: TobagoJack1 Recommendation

Recommended By
Haim R. Branisteanu

  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 217542
 
the articles and others on same topic does not mention the actual and prospective power source for the plasma engine as applied to air travel (as opposed to space travel), but I suppose something hydrogen might do

bloomberg.com

Scientists Develop Plasma Thruster That Could One Day Power Planes

Chinese scientists said they developed a plasma-thruster prototype that might one day lessen the aviation industry’s reliance on fossil fuel, bringing air travel free of carbon emissions a step closer to reality.

The device, built by a team from the Institute of Technological Sciences at Wuhan University, uses only air and electricity to generate propulsion with an efficiency comparable to a commercial jet engine under laboratory conditions. The team used the technology to lift a 1 kilogram (2.2 pound) steel ball over a quartz tube with a diameter of 24 millimeters (1 inch), it said in a paper published on Tuesday.

Plasma is the fourth fundamental state of matter beyond solid, liquid, and gas, consisting of an aggregate of charged ions. The team compressed air into high pressures and used microwaves to ionize it, which is then expelled to create propulsion. The researchers said a scaled-up system could provide enough power for an aircraft.

The team said its method differs from other types of plasma jet thrusters in that it compresses and ionizes air instead of xenon, argon, or hydrogen as used by spacecraft. The team is working on improving the efficiency of its device.

— With assistance by Charlie Zhu, and Chunying Zhang

Before it's here, it's on the Bloomberg Terminal.
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theengineer.co.uk

Plasma jet thrusters make push for propulsion

6th May 2020 11:05 am

Researchers in China have demonstrated a prototype device that uses microwave air plasmas for jet propulsion, an advance that could one day replace fossil fuel combustion engines.

A schematic diagram of a prototype microwave air plasma thruster and the images of the bright plasma jet at different microwave powers. This device consists of a microwave power supply, an air compressor, a compressed microwave waveguide and a flame ignitor (Image: Jau Tang and Jun Li)The team from the Institute of Technological Sciences at Wuhan University describe the engine in AIP Advances.

Waiting in the wings: How plasma could help revolutionise aircraft design

“The motivation of our work is to help solve the global warming problems owing to humans’ use of fossil fuel combustion engines to power machinery, such as cars and airplanes,” said author Jau Tang, a professor at Wuhan University. “There is no need for fossil fuel with our design, and therefore, there is no carbon emission to cause greenhouse effects and global warming.”

The researchers are said to have created a plasma jet by compressing air and using a microwave to ionise the pressurised air stream.

This method is claimed to differ from previous attempts to create plasma jet thrusters in one key way: other plasma jet thrusters, like NASA’s Dawn space probe, use xenon plasma, which they team said cannot overcome the friction in Earth’s atmosphere, and are not powerful enough for use in air transportation. Instead, the authors’ plasma jet thruster generates the high-temperature, high-pressure plasma in situ using only injected air and electricity.

The prototype plasma jet device can lift a 1kg steel ball over a 24mm diameter quartz tube, where the high-pressure air is converted into a plasma jet by passing through a microwave ionisation chamber. To scale, the corresponding thrusting pressure is comparable to a commercial airplane jet engine.

By building a large array of these thrusters with high-power microwave sources, the prototype design can be scaled up to a full-sized jet. The authors are working on improving the efficiency of the device toward this goal.

“Our results demonstrated that such a jet engine based on microwave air plasma can be a potentially viable alternative to the conventional fossil fuel jet engine,” Tang said in a statement.