nanog mailing list archives

Re: East Coast outage?


From: hackerwacker () tarpit cybermesa com
Date: Sun, 17 Aug 2003 12:57:34 -0600 (MDT)


On Sunday 17 August 2003 11:55 am, Having folded space, the Third Stage 
Guild Navigator said:
Use hydrogen. One solar panel (which will last forever unless you drop
something on it) can split H2O into H and O. Store the H for windless
days or at night. Feed this to a turbine for electricity and recover 
heat
for hot water, store it in a heat sink, ect. Or feed the H into a fuel
cell &

What kind of land area of solar panels do you plan to produce enough H 
for
producing a gigawatt 24/7? Then multiply that by 60. You probably have 
to
produce H equivivalent of 180GW to accommodate for nights and cloudier
days, even if you would be somewhere where it usually shines.

If you want to add windmills to the equation, do the land area 
calculation
taking into account turbulence effects which mandate your mill spacing.

Pete

The calculations I have seen of hydrogen produced vs watts in indicate
solar could supply enough hydrogen to more than satisfy
the requirements of a residential user.

To calculate the theoretical (maximum) volume of the hydrogen produced, 
also in cubic meters, from the other data for the current and the time, 
using "Faraday's First Law":

Vtheoretical = (R I T t) / (F p z),

where R=8.314 Joule/(mol Kelvin), I = current in amps, T is the 
temperature in Kelvins (273 + Celsius temperature), t = time in seconds, F 
= Faraday's constant = 96485 Coulombs per mol, p = ambient pressure = 
about 1 x 105 pascals (one pascal = 1 Joule/meter3), z = number of 
"excess" electrons = 2 (for hydrogen, H2), 4 (if you're measuring oxygen 
production instead). 

6 hours sunlight, ave (it's 7.1 here in new mexico) 4 120 watt panels, so:

8.914* 28*303*21600=1.633529e+09

96485*105*2= 20261850

80.620965 cubic meters of hydrogen a day

Kyocera KC-120's are 1242mm by 652 mm

So, put them on your roof. Lots of unused space. No need to have huge 
expanses
for centralized generation. I've read of Solar Cells as building 
materials, using the Cells as the shell of the house.

Sorry, I do not have a formula to factor in the Exxon Valdez damage, 
other damage to our enrironment, billions lost last week, ect !



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