• @empireOfLove2@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    1 month ago

    Water and steam just too goddamn convenient. Super high latent heat so it can move a ton of energy with a quick phase change, works at reasonable pressures and temperatures, stays liquid all the time when you want it to so pumps work, and it’s so readily available as to be damn near free. Super cool!

  • @Glowstick@lemmy.world
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    1 month ago

    Solar photovoltaic is the only one i can think of that isn’t just a fancy way to make steam

    EDIT

    ok let’s clarify to say a method that isn’t related to movement of a fluid that spins a turbine. So not windmills (air is a fluid), not hydro, not geothermal, etc.

  • @FiniteBanjo@lemmy.today
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    631 month ago

    That’s why Photovoltaic Cells got the Nobel Prize, imo. The only new way to generate electricity actually put to use AFAIK.

    Of course it’s completely inefficient at large scale and they just revert back to mirroring light into a collection tower where steam happens.

    • AggressivelyPassive
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      491 month ago

      Wasn’t the main appeal of the mirror installations that you can store the heat somewhat efficiently? Rooftop solar is cost effective even here in Germany, where darkness and shadows loom around every corner.

      • @FiniteBanjo@lemmy.today
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        1 month ago

        These numbers change every year, but: solar panels on roofs don’t track so they’d be lucky to get 20%, average closer to 12%, efficiency and slowly degrade over a few years. Sun tracking panels can reach a maximum of around 40%, theoretically, but on average more like 20%-30%. You have to subtract the negative impact of creating and assembling the materials from it’s lifetime effectiveness, in Germany I believe Hydrogen Steel exists which is much greener than other types of smelting, or otherwise Aluminum is the higher grade material used for such things, and Photovoltaic Panels have a very specialized Glass in most cases that has to be exceptionally clear and strong. If the capacitance of the system is not enough to hold the produced power then an electrical failure will occur, so you must also include large commercial and industrial batteries.

        Meanwhile, a Heliostat (a Collection Tower and Mirror Array) out in the desert has a theoretical efficiency just below 70%. Furthermore, if the capacity of the grid fills up then the array can be disable by adjusting the mirrors and excess power can be stored for extremely long periods of time by utilizing molten salt beneath the tower.

        These efficiency numbers refer to how much of the heat energy from full spectrum light hitting the array is converted into electricity. Home panels are nice because you can put them on your home

        • Turun
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          151 month ago

          Yeah, but PV is dirt cheap nowadays. Also

          degrade over a few years.

          If by “few” you mean like 30-50 then sure, they degrade. But it certainly beats anything with a spinning turbine. Or anything with moving parts really. PV is purely solid state physics, you can’t get more longevity than that.

          If the capacitance of the system is not enough to hold the produced power then an electrical failure will occur, so you must also include large commercial and industrial batteries

          That’s not true. You can also simply turn PV off. The inverters only run when they sense 50 Hz on their output terminals, it’s easy to have them turn off when it’s 50.2 instead. Basically all big powerplants follow that rule already, ordered by things like shutoff time etc.

          a Heliostat (a Collection Tower and Mirror Array) out in the desert

          Funny that you specified in the desert. The appeal of PV is not only that it’s cheap and easy, it also scales down to small investments and local power generation. If base load actually becomes a problem concentrated solar power will be relevant. But for now, slapping a few solar panels on your roof just makes sense.

            • Turun
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              81 month ago

              The solar panels I just bought have a manufacturer warranty for 87% power output after 30 years.

            • @Heliumfart@sh.itjust.works
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              1 month ago

              My dad is still using the first 60w panel he bought in 1986, for 600$. Obvs added many more to his system, and who knows how efficient it is, but it does work, haven’t put a ampmeter on it though.

              Mind you it was made in the USA, probably better materials than nowadays.

              • Turun
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                51 month ago

                The mass market has really pushed solar panel production. I expect the material quality even of the cheap china panels to be better than what anyone was able to produce almost 40 years ago. That’s a long time to understand degradation processes and develop countermeasures.

      • @skillissuer@discuss.tchncs.de
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        31 month ago

        it’s both, but i’m not sure if these large solar concentrators (ivanpah or these things in spain) are more efficient than current pv panels

        • AggressivelyPassive
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          41 month ago

          I mean, if they’re dramatically cheaper, they don’t have to be efficient.

          That being said, solar cells get around 20% efficiency, steam generators maybe 50% on a good day, subtract the reflection, collection and storage inefficiencies and you might get roughly in the same ballpark as solar cells.

          • @FiniteBanjo@lemmy.today
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            21 month ago

            Non-tracking solar panels are closer to 12% actual efficiency, 20% would be a theoretical efficiency. I only mention this because you used an actual efficiency estimate for the steam generator but not the solar panel.

            • AggressivelyPassive
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              91 month ago

              That’s because I’m so smart I completely ignored that the sun moves around during the day.

      • @FiniteBanjo@lemmy.today
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        181 month ago

        There is an argument to be made that the wind power is technically steam power, given the moist gaseous fluid turning a turbine, but that’s silly.

        • @Corkyskog@sh.itjust.works
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          1 month ago

          Right. We all know it’s generated by trees. It’s why cutting trees down is so bad for the environment, it stops the wind and everything gets more hot. Leading to global warming.

    • @frezik@midwest.social
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      121 month ago

      Cost per MWh is what tends to matter more than efficiency. Photovoltaics have become dirt cheap. Mirror collection systems haven’t been able to keep up, and the projects for them are basically defunct at this point.

      Was worth trying, though. It wasn’t obvious that photovoltaics would get so damn cheap 10 or 20 years ago.

        • @theonyltruemupf@feddit.de
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          11 month ago

          20% for static panels is fine though because they are spamable. They are cheap and you can just put them on roofs and parking lots.

          • @FiniteBanjo@lemmy.today
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            01 month ago

            Nobody was arguing anything otherwise, I was just answering questions about why we swap back to steam power for largescale. If you’re powering some LEDs and a Toaster then yeah it’s fine, if you’re powering 10,000 then heliostat time.

  • @Rossphorus@lemm.ee
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    261 month ago

    Some types of fusion can bypass steam generation and use what’s creatively called Direct Energy Conversion. If the fusion products are charged particles they can be passed through a magnetic field to separate them based on charge and collected onto plates. When you look at the electric potential between the plates you’ve effectively created a voltage, no steam necessary. It’s also theoretically possible to do the same with some types of fission products too.

    • Another Catgirl
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      31 month ago

      I thought they take advantage of the velocity of the charged ions to magnetically transfer power to electromagnetic coils around the reactor.

      • @Rossphorus@lemm.ee
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        21 month ago

        There’s a whole bunch of mechanisms, largely depending on the fusion architecture and the atoms being fused. For tokamak reactors the circular nature lends itself well to what you describe, though usually it’s energy being imparted into the ions to keep them contained and away from the walls. In the ‘standard’ deuterium-tritium fusion model (the easiest to perform) fusion produces a helium nucleus and a neutron, where the neutron gets most of the energy. Since a neutron can’t be contained by magnets it impacts the chamber walls. This heat is wicked away by, you guessed it, cooling water which turns into steam. In order to use a direct energy conversion strategy you need a fusion reaction that produces no neutrons, but we’re not there yet.

    • @TheUniverseandNetworks@lemmy.world
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      1 month ago

      generate electricity.

      not generate electricity.

      generate electricity the other way around.

      not generate electricity.

      generate electricity.

      not generate electricity.

      generate electricity the other way around.

      not generate electricity…

      Edit: I dumbly misread your post (energy/electricity) & thought of this, which I will leave here because it made me smile & that’s a good thing.

  • Dessalines
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    131 month ago

    /uj Steam is just an intermediary form for almost all these tho (except maybe geothermal? not sure), not the real source.

    • @skillissuer@discuss.tchncs.de
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      211 month ago

      Steam just makes sense as a fluid for heat engines, thermal power plants are mostly steam, except when gas turbines are involved, but even then there’s most of the time steam bottoming cycle. (gas turbine burns something, then exhaust is hot enough to power steam cycle) Unless thermal power plant is small, then it’s more likely to be diesel engine (up to few MW). Only when it’s photovoltaics, or hydropower, or wind farm (or tidal powerplant, or some other weird ones) there’s no place for steam to be involved (solar thermal plants sometimes use steam cycle). Geothermal powerplants use steam if source is hot enough, otherwise it’s something more volatile in organic Rankine cycle

      • Dessalines
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        11 month ago

        I’m referring to the root energy source, rather than how it’s transferred.

        • @skillissuer@discuss.tchncs.de
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          41 month ago

          Then it’s just heat transfer medium for most of geothermal powerplants too, because from what i understand, most of the time condensed water is recycled (and source of energy is just “hot rocks” anyway)

          then if you look at the bigger picture, all that energy can be traced back to either sun, nuclear fission (in reactors) or nuclear decay/primordial heat (geothermal)

    • @WarmSoda@lemm.ee
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      161 month ago

      Geothermal power still uses steam to generate electricity. It’s steams all the way down.

      • Dessalines
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        -31 month ago

        Steam isn’t the energy source tho, just a transfer mechanism.

        • @Strykker@programming.dev
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          51 month ago

          Same for all the others like coal and nuclear though. So that’s a dumb distinction to try to make.

          Steam is always just a transfer mechanism if it’s part of the power generation

          • Dessalines
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            1 month ago

            Then why focus on steam specifically, why not other required intermediaries, like turbines, the storage mechanism.

            The main meaningful distinction in energy generation is the root sources of the energy, nuclear, wind, hydro, etc. All of those share similar conversion methods and intermediary forms, but have different sources.

        • @WarmSoda@lemm.ee
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          31 month ago

          Hence the meme. Because almost everything uses steam.

          Any other jokes you want to break down for no reason?

    • TJA!
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      51 month ago

      Solar is an exception I think

      • zout
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        21 month ago

        True, but there are also solar steam systems, using a parabolic mirror to focus the sun on a steam drum.

        • Schadrach
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          21 month ago

          Arguably these are even greener than photovoltaics, since they don’t require the same kinds of materials to make (mostly just steel) and last longer than photovoltaics are supposed to. They use a fair bit of water, but you probably aren’t building them in places where water is at a premium.

          • @Strykker@programming.dev
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            31 month ago

            I mean the main steam cycle solar plants are built in dry sunny hot regions, not exactly a great source of water, but probably not completely void of it either.

      • @WarmSoda@lemm.ee
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        1 month ago

        Solar, wind, and hydro don’t use steam. (Well, hydro can bypass the steam part. It depends)

  • FreshLight
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    111 month ago

    It always produces unbelievably great memes when another person discovers how humanity generates energy from splitting atoms. I was baffled, too.

    • @captainlezbian@lemmy.world
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      41 month ago

      It just makes sense. Our only way to convert electromagnetic radiation to current is photovoltaics, so solar. No way to convert alpha/beta radiation to current. So what else does fission release? Fuckload of motion. Mostly heat if it’s not as a blast, in which case it’s still mostly heat but with a pressure wave that levels cities. Heat though, heat were real good at making into electricity.

  • 🇰 🔵 🇱 🇦 🇳 🇦 🇰 ℹ️
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    1 month ago

    I like piezoelectrics and kinetic generators. The only two methods of generating electricity I know of that don’t involve steam other than solar panels.

    At least, I think they’re different… Is a standard copper wire+magnet generator pizeoelectric? Or is it simply the operation is similar in that you generate electricity from moving things together? Like the difference between tiny little things in your shirt that generate electricity as you move around vs those flash lights you shake to charge.

    • @frezik@midwest.social
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      1 month ago

      Piezoelectric effect is when you vibrate certain crystals and they give off electricity. It’s also reversible. You can feed them electricity to generate sound. The beep-boop sound from small electronic devices is usually from a piezo speaker, because they’re dirt cheap.

      You don’t get significant amounts of power out of it, though.

      • @captainlezbian@lemmy.world
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        1 month ago

        Yeah it’s quartz lol

        Also photovoltaic is reversible as well! Put light in get current out, put current in, get light out. But the diodes that get good light for the currents we use are shit for generating the current we like from the light we have and vice versa. Also! Most diodes are these types! That’s why we make their casing black, otherwise the light will interfere with computation!

      • 🇰 🔵 🇱 🇦 🇳 🇦 🇰 ℹ️
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        1 month ago

        Yeah. The one thing I ever saw that has me excited for a product that could exist, is that they can power a simple OLED display. And since an OLED display can be paper thin, they could put one in a t-shirt and you could have an animated design on your shirt instead of just a static picture. And that would be dope.

        Of course, you’d need more than just the display, and i don’t think the little generators that can be sewn into a shirt would be enough to power the computing device that would be necessary to drive the animation for the display.

    • @captainlezbian@lemmy.world
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      61 month ago

      They’re different. The piezoelectric effect converts pressure to charge. However steam is just kinetic with an extra step