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solar PV → heat pump → water heater; direct, no A/C or intermediate components. Practical? Feasible?
  • IIUC, it’s variable D/C which must be regulated and/or inverted to A/C involving more hardware, conversion, and waste.

    Actually, I had a discussion about this with someone who really knows this stuff recently, and we figured that the inversion process isn't actually that inefficient. The efficiencies achieved are often >95%, so there isn't actually a lot of loss.

  • Elements of Renewable Energy
  • yes, and more importantly, normal Hydro plants could be updated to release water at selected times, to create "on-demand power". The energy is stored in the water behind the dam. So conventional, already-existing hydro dams can perform a two-sided function: Storing water, and to release it on-demand. Like a battery that is refilled by nature.

  • parts in a Renewable Energy system
  • My idea is that most Hydro-Power plants can be used as reservoirs with little modification.

    And biomass can be burned at whatever moment you like (provided you have the plants to do so), so it is "on-demand power" in some sense.

  • Elements of Renewable Energy

    Renewable Energy has many parts, and some of them can do jobs that others cannot do. It is important to work together to bring the best renewable Energy to the world that we can hope to achieve.

    This diagram represents a short overview over different elements of a renewable energy network, and what the different parts can do, and what not.

    For example, Hydropower can be both an energy source (flowing water through a turbine) but also a means of energy storage (by keeping the water behind the dam). Renewable Biomass can be stored well, but can also be turned into a renewable source of energy. Batteries can store energy well, but cannot produce energy.

    Thoughts, comments, likes :-)

    41
    Hydrogen Policy’s Narrow Path: Delusions And Solutions
  • actually, that's not true. I built a hobby-grade hydrolysis machine in my garage for a total of $3. I can't imagine hydrolysis machines to be significantly expensive in general.

    The reason why they're expensive today is because they're completely over-engineered. But that's not physics' fault. It's just someone seeking the "highest-quality product" instead of one that makes economic sense.

  • Would you buy 2nd-hand PV panels?
  • Just informing you: You can see the power output of PV panels by looking at the Watt number. It says something like 400 Wp (Watt peak - i.e. Watt under direct sunlight). Voltage is more or less irrelevant.

  • the solar revolution

    !

    The dissemination and distribution of solar power might seem minor today, but if you model solar growth as roughly exponential - as is typical for new developments - then solar could become the dominant power source in 2036 - which is not far into the future, even on human timescales. I ask you to keep your head up high, and believe into the future, because I care about you, and I don't want you to suffer from depression and anxiety.

    Sources: solar energy growth and energy mix

    3
    the case for hope

    two signals drive the human spirit: positive and negative vibes.

    while at first glance, both might seem like legitimate ways to actuate people, one (negative) is devouring, the other (positive) is enhancing. that is why positive news should be preferred here instead of negative ones.

    I'm saying this because I see a lot of very dystopian headlines being pushed around here.

    (while at first glance, negative news might seem to get more attention; in the long run, positive news is what sticks with people. be encouraging, not discouraging.) :D

    8
    classic dilemma
  • billionaires are a cancer of society and need to be cut out. they think of nothing but their own growth and will damage all of the system because of it. we need to get rid of them before it's too late.

    Edit: better yet, we need policies that disencourage their behavior.

  • where have all the insects gone? | Financial Times
  • So, I have comments/questions:

    • insects just like any other lifeform is sensitive and needs protection. they lay their eggs underground, where they're protected from direct sunlight and the cold winter. if we plough through the dirt every year, it's obvious that we'll disrupt that generational hibernation, and that disrupts the cycle of death and rebirth for the insects, that's why they vanish. I think ploughing is the biggest reason for insects disappearing, though it wasn't listed in the article (or i missed it)

    “We could not feed the global human population without [insect] pollinators,”

    (that's a quote from the article). I think that's wrong though. Most calories are provided by cereals, and cereals are wind-pollinating, AFAIK.

  • where have all the insects gone? | Financial Times
  • I saw a meme a while ago with three panels:

    • in the first panel, insects smashing against a driving car (labeled 1990)
    • in the second panel, just the driver, but no insects (labeled 2020)
    • in the third panel, the driver is gone, it's just the car (labeled 2050)

    unfortunately i can't find the meme anymore.

  • Bacteria helping to extract rare metals from old batteries in boost for green tech
  • Instead of recycling rare metals from batteries (which is notoriously difficult), try constructing your batteries without rare metals. It is theoretically possible, sodium ion batteries set an example for this. Yet they are still under development. Link

  • InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)GA
    gandalf_der_12te @slrpnk.net
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