Pure water still conducts but requires a lot more energy, I think you would use either seawater or add something to increase conductivity.
People generally use caustic soda as the electrolyte as you dont want chlorine in the system. The UK has generally lagged behind Germany and Japan in this technology, but we do have a winning company in this area ITM power. ITM Power | Energy Storage | Clean FuelThanks. I can't speak for everyone, but I've known about electrolysis for 60 years or so. I believe one has to add something to the water, as pure water is not a good conductor. Is that right? I think in my "The boy electrician" book, it was sodium chloride, and chlorine was an undesired side effect.
Thanks. I can't speak for everyone, but I've known about electrolysis for 60 years or so. I believe one has to add something to the water, as pure water is not a good conductor. Is that right? I think in my "The boy electrician" book, it was sodium chloride, and chlorine was an undesired side effect.
Thanks. It is a pleasure to have someone who knows their stuff contributing to this.thread.People generally use caustic soda as the electrolyte as you dont want chlorine in the system. The UK has generally lagged behind Germany and Japan in this technology, but we do have a winning company in this area ITM power. ITM Power | Energy Storage | Clean Fuel
Fascinating, you clearly know your stuff and it's very encouraging to see the progress being made for an alternative energyPeople generally use caustic soda as the electrolyte as you dont want chlorine in the system. The UK has generally lagged behind Germany and Japan in this technology, but we do have a winning company in this area ITM power. ITM Power | Energy Storage | Clean Fuel
As is quite often the case, UK academics have been getting over-excited about hydrogen, this article is some welcome skepticism. Hydrogen as a fuel/vector/chemicals has been around a very long time. It is expensive to process. ICI spend £500m+ in the late 1970s and early 1980s trying to find better ways to use its surplus hydrogen generated in Runcorn and Teesside, it even built a salt cavern under the Cheshire plane to store it. These old salt caverns store most of the UKs natural gas supply (replacing the old manometers) as well as exotic gases such as ethylene.
Fortunately/unfortunately a big chunk of my day job is trying to work out strategies for UK manufacturing to become net zero. You wont believe the number of industry committees looking into this topic, covering everything we manufacture from, planes, jet engines, chemicals, pharma, plastics, cars, ships, rails even housing and construction. Its the biggest challenge I've seen in 35 years in the industry. What is nice about it, is industries are talking to each other, no-one has the full picture so we are co-operating to share information on the issue. I've not seen that behavior in the UK before - its more of a continental culture. Industry was generally quite skeptical of getting too involved 20 years ago as they had lost money in this area, but opinion has shifted in the past 15 years. I don't know of a major manufacturing company that has not got a climate change team looking at this issue.Fascinating, you clearly know your stuff and it's very encouraging to see the progress being made for an alternative energy
And because the load is different, you don‘t get the same “sweep” of brightness change as you do with filament lamps. A particular type of dimmer switch perhaps?You can buy LEDs that are dimmable, but not all are. You will pay a bit of a premium.
Which is probably why the LED dimmers we have are programmable. You can set the max and min levels.And because the load is different, you don‘t get the same “sweep” of brightness change as you do with filament lamps. A particular type of dimmer switch perhaps?
The biggest cost in building a house is consumed by the (inflated) price of the land. - If less of our "precious" land was reserved for grouse-moors and national-trust parkland there would be plenty of space for Every-one to build their own home. - It's always the (obscenely) wealthy trying to (mercilessly) hang on to their wealth that makes life intolerable for the rest of us.I am certain the way to solve the housing crisis is to make houses more difficult and more expensive to build.
Instead of not being able to afford a poorly built inefficient house now I won't be able to afford a nicely built energy efficient house.
It was pointed out a while ago that a lot of data regarding temperature is irrelevant as the data test stations historically where built outside of towns and have now been encompassed by the town and the temperature change in these stations is well within the margin of increase expected due to it relative environment! Also there is historic evidence of temperature increases in excess of what where seeing now when man was running round the Forrest with spears so while I'm not so whilst I do believe we are having an affect I believe there is far more in play than we know about!This article from Steve Baker seems very dated in its details. Firstly the myth that the rate of warming has slowed almost flat. This came out about 10 years ago when there had been four years of little increase in global temperature. However analysis showed that el nino accounted for it. It caused a high for a couple of years that exaggerated global warming and then the La nina caused a cooling, once that's taken into account global warming was comprehensibly shown to continue and 10 years later all the temperature measurements show it. here are the actual measurements from the well respected US National data, (US goverment).
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Steve Baker is right to highlight there will be costs to consumers in adapting to climate change, but his figures are way out. Projections for EVs and heat pumps show that when the change is compulsory ie by 2030 to 2035 the costs will be in line with existing technology. Today with low production numbers its expensive new tech. Remer the cost of TV in 1952 and how its fell, same with all tech as its industrialised the cost falls.
As for the weather, the warming atmosphere does not lead to uniform rises in surface temperature in the UK or anywhere. Its really extra energy in the systems and this extra energy causes more water vapour and more violent wind. Our current weather is a consequence of the extra energy in the atmosphere compounded with a low pressure systems in the Atlantic. expect more cold and wet summer months and heat waves as the system gets more energetic. Why has May been so wet? - BBC Weather
Politicians on both side of the climate debate tend to pick data to suit their arguments, which makes it hard for us to follow. Its best to look for the consensus scientific arguments that do get into the mainstream media. The advantage of this is the scientific review method weeds out biased data sets. This topic is quite fast changing so quite hard to follow.
The commentator Matthew Goodwin is spot on, with the UK government hosting COP26 in November these topics will be in the new from now until then. If BJ thinks he can emulate Thatchers tour de force at the UN Montreal CFC conference expect a lot of publicity on this topic. To quote from the UN write up on the Protocol: 't and then prime minister of the UK, Margaret Thatcher, of the situation’s severity. The speech she made to bring the world together on this issue is still worthy of the most globally-minded eco-warrior today. “We carry common burdens, face common problems and must response with common action,” she told the UN General Assembly in 1989, when the agreement was on the brink of disaster.
The resulting Montreal Protocol not only banned CFCs but also ensured that rich nations would help developing countries to pay for the greener alternatives. The cynic in me suspects there will be similar grand words from the current government.
The Montreal protocol has some similarities to todays debate, The alternative to CFCs were about 10 times the cost of CFS in 1986 when they were first developed, but since they were industrialised the cost of fridges are hardly risen despite the complexity of the new refrigerants. The latest generation of wind turbines produce electricity that is cheaper than coal fired generation. So yes there will be costs, but £100k is way over.
At present the goal and gas suppliers turn down during these times. Nuclear cant so continues to run and they pay a price for this.
Hydrogen will be generated by electrolysis of water either on-shore where the power comes ashore, or even offshore.
But surely the end result is the same, we would just have more time to watch and do even less. It is like development where they say it is only a few houses so no impact but in reality the end result is like filling a fifty gallon tank either with a spoon or a bucket, either way it will end up filled.It is simply the base upon which the bulk of human development has taken place. Speed of change is the problem, not the change itsself.
A healthy skepticism is necessary, this is a complex topic.It was pointed out a while ago that a lot of data regarding temperature is irrelevant as the data test stations historically where built outside of towns and have now been encompassed by the town and the temperature change in these stations is well within the margin of increase expected due to it relative environment! Also there is historic evidence of temperature increases in excess of what where seeing now when man was running round the Forrest with spears so while I'm not so whilst I do believe we are having an affect I believe there is far more in play than we know about!
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