Harnessing Vertical Sea Temperature Gradient
Sterling D. Allan writes "Sea Solar Power Inc., run by three generations of James Hilbert Andersons, has developed a solar power technology that does not fluctuate with the weather, but is available constantly. Their solution is to harness the solar energy stored in the sea by tapping the thermal gradient that exists naturally between the surface and deep waters, using a reverse refrigeration cycle. The modeling and testing done by the Anderson family over three generations since 1962 predicts that the cost of energy generation through this method will be within a price range comparable to nuclear, coal, natural gas, and other contemporary grid power plants. Ocean Thermal Energy Conversion, or OTEC, was invented in 1881 by a French scientist, Jacques Arsene D'Arsonval. SSP should be ready to build their first full prototype 2-3 years from now."
Aquethermal, if you please! It's only solar in the sense that all power on Earth apart from geothermal is solar.
For the love of God, please learn to spell "ridiculous"!!!
Just like hydro power, this one has the problem of disrupting the environment, albeit a very local environment. By moving water against the normal gradient, you will warm up water that's supposed to be cold, and cool off water that's supposed to be warm. I could imagine plankton blooms and oxygen depletion, among other side effects.
Passive solar collection (photovoltaic and otherwise) and wind power are really the only truly "green" power sources.
There exists no way of exchanging information without making judgments. --Bene Gesserit Axiom
Further, what of the potential for secondary effects? Climate changes brought about by changes in ocean current temperatures? Remember, el nino/la nina are caused by a change of only a few degrees. That's not unforseeable for a large-scale technology such as this.
Oh, and BTW - it makes a lot more sense to base this on something like an oil rig, rather than a ship. Just sayin', is all.
"SSP should be ready to build their first full prototype 2-3 years from now.""
It will run Linux (everything else will by 2007-2008)
I did a report on OTEC when I was in junior high--18 years ago--based on an article in Scientific American. There are prototype facilities in a number of countries--I visited the facility in Hawaii five years ago, which was at least a decade old then.
It's an intriguing idea, but this smacks of somebody trying to get publicity to bring in venture capital or something of the sort.
why not just harness the wave energy?
The theory of relativity doesn't work right in Arkansas.
Nice to see concepts popularized (though hardly invented) by Sid Meier's Alpha Centauri being realized, considering this is basically like a Thermocline Transducer.
The article says that the current world consumption of energy is about 1/300th of the energy available from the oceans in this way. I'm not sure if that's a tiny fraction or not, actually. Local effects on the ecology could be significant for a large power generation facility.
But the article also says that they can produce fresh water as a by-product, and that the process works best in the tropics (i.e. the developing world), so this might have a chance, since it'd probably be better for the environment than more fossil fuel consumption.
Have you read my blog lately?
'Has developed'? How about 'is developing'?
I mean, in the last year, I've read about thermal stacks, hydrogen generation using thermal power, horizontally-oriented wind turbines, and probably some other alternative power methods. They're all great ideas, with great possibility, but the summary for every one reads like a sales pitch.
AC: Only on slashdot... could the sentence "My hovercraft is full of eels." be moderated "+4, Insightful
Set up shop in Caribbean or Gulf of Mexico and maybe as a added benefit, such energy harvesting, could decreasing hurricane potential by cooling surface water temperature. This would be win-win, but I am sure that it would also be disruptive to some marine life so maybe a win-win-lose sometime you just can't have it all.
With this in mind, is it really wise to start monkeying with the thermal gradient of the oceans at the equator?
Do the math. The entire world's energy budget isn't enough to make even a microscopic change in the thermal gradients of the ocean.
Find free books.
"...using a reverse refrigeration cycle."
We have a name for those. They're called engines.
Fitzghon
I've been reading about this since the 70s. It's a great idea and I can't understand why no one has built a prototype yet. Most of the systems I read about proposed using something like amonia since it was dealing with a temperature difference rather than high temperatures. Some chemicals like amonia boil at very low temperatures. They don't produce the power steam does but it's a stable source. Deep ocean temperatures are near freezing where as surface temperatures can be 40 to 50 degrees higher in the same area. Some have complained about cooling surface water. The ocean is a mighty big heat sink and it's doubtful plants that are spread out would have much affect. In truth it might help offset some of the surface warming caused by global warming. I'm not sure enough plants could be built that would drop ocean surface temperature one degree. Temperatures have already raised that much in the last 100 years.
The problem here is the huge quantity of thermal energy that needs to be exchanged for a small amount of useful work. To generate work between a 80 degree f source and a 50 degree f sink the best you can do is around 7 percent efficiency.
The ocean is so grossly unimaginably big that we would need an absolutely huge operation to even cause a measurable effect. If you really tried to change the temperature by even a fraction of a degree using this method you would have to pump extremely large quantities of water---quantities so large that I don't think anyone would ever consider building something so massive.
People sometimes forget the scale of things. On a global scale, we are not even part of the equation.
But you also have to consider the opportunity costs of doing this. If we would raise the global atmospheric temperature 1/10 of a degree with all the carbon we were burning, what will the net effect be if we can convert a significant portion of our energy sources from burning carbon to mixing a small amount of cold and warm water?
The radical sect of Islam would either see you dead or "reverted" to Islam.
Don't worry. Global warming will make it all balance out.
"Prefiero morir de pie que vivir siempre arrodillado!"
Deja vu!?!
There is a global circulation system called thermohaline. Basically in three relative small areas of the oceans the water sinks until the bottom, and then spread around the world. This water slowly go up again and the system is closed with surface warmer waters flowing in direction of the areas of generation.
I'm not even considering the energetic balance of the proposed structure, but if it works it might reduce the vertical thermal gradient and make the thermohaline circulation weaker. Maybe stop it. The movie "The Day After Tomorrow" is a fantasy about it, but be sure at least that the surface temperature on the North Atlantic would reduce since is one of those areas of generation of deep waters. You can imagine how would be the winter on Europe and North America? Would need a lot of energy to keep people warm there!
Wikipedia entry on the subject of Ocean thermal energy conversion: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/OTEC
I'd hardly call this "debunking". I happen to know David Battisti, and I think he's a good and credible atmospheric circulation researcher. On the other hand, plenty of other good and credible oceanographic circulation researchers I know would refute this, and have done extensive work on the amount of heat transported by the Gulf Stream, and its role in sustaining thermohaline circulation and associated climate effects. A press release about paper maketh noth scientific truth.
Not only that, but even if the Gulf Stream is not the primary deliverer of heat to northern Europe, the 20-line press release you cited does not claim that Europe's climate will not be affected by a change in thermohaline circulation.
So if you're searching for a thin vine to cling to the increasingly untenable view that carbon-loading of the atmosphere is not a major problem, better not grab too hard on this one.
I guess I am being punished by my mechanical engineering background.
It is possible that there is some good information on this site (somewhere), but quite frankly I do not know what you would want to waste time separating the real information from the quackery.
----- There are two kinds of people in this world, my friend; those with loaded guns, and those who dig.
Fission reactors, our only current form of nuclear power, split uranium nuclei into smaller fragments and thereby release energy. However, to form the uranium atom in the first place from smaller constituents therefore required energy. This energy is thought to have come from a supernova ~6 billion years ago, predating the formation of the solar system. Thus current reactors are, by some (possibly warped!) definition, still using fossilized "solar" power. The same can also be said of geothermal which relies mainly on natural decay of nuclei formed by the same supernova.
Only if we ever get fusion reactors working then we really say that we are no longer reliant on solar based power...and that's because we will have made our own mini-sun.
Under-ocean electric generation methods are doomed to be radically costly to maintain. Damn, ever see what salt water does to most machines over time? Not pretty.
Horns are really just a broken halo.
The US generates and uses about 3800 billion kwh of electricity per year.
ASSUMING this thing can convert a 40 degree F (22 C) temperature gradient into electricity at 100% efficiency (which it can't, just looking for order of magnitude kind of thing here) then a 6ft (2m) diameter pipe sucking water in at a 20fps (6m/s) velocity will suck up enough water to generate 1500MW.
Ignoring peak demand and all that, it would take 300 (300) of them to power the entire US.
Assuming an average ocean depth of 1000ft (300m), which I suspect is considerably on the shallow side, it would take 230,000 years (7.25 Ts) to suck up the entire contents of the oceans. By this time, perhaps the sun would restore the temperature gradient to its original magnitude.
All in all, one of the less moronic alternative power schemes I've heard of.
p.s. - I'm not sure if I'm assisting or mocking our metric friends.
pebble bed reactors don't go china syndrome. environmentalists attitudes about nuclear is based on decades-old technology and watching too much "silkwood"
thermocline, solar, biodiesel, wind, tidal turbine, wave generated, etc.: these are all very cute boutique energy sources. but when all put together and maxed out in terms of realization of potential they won't dent 5% of our energy needs
oil and gas and coal are incredibly dirty and even geopolitically dangerous and increasingly expensive
put it all together and pebble bed reactors are an environmentalist's and energy policy maker's best friend
now we just need the lowest common denominator of uneducated environmentalist's opinions to catch up with reality
ps: YOU CAN'T MAKE BOMBS OUT OF IT
educate yourself, don't let your uneducated fears dictate your opinion
as time goes by, nuclear is only going to look more and more attractive to this world, once everyone gets a real education of the positves and negatives of nuclear compared to everything else
because the biggest thing going against nuclear really is only inertia and ignorance
intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
Looks like we have covered this topic rather well.
The discussions were better on those, too.
Jack
global warmng isn't really an issue. Truth be told we don't know what the hell is happening to the enviorment.
Yeah, there is nothing new about this, I think this is some kind of a slashvertisement. The technology that OTEC has been developing in this field is interesting. Hopefully it will ultimately pan out.
t ml
:)
Here's where I have seen more about this technology before:
http://www.wired.com/wired/archive/13.06/craven.h
http://www.nrel.gov/otec/
Enjoy
This is the lyrics from the song "Under the Sea" from The Little Mermaid.
Gosh, I am disappointed in the quality of nerds these days. Ever heard of the back of an envelope? For god's sake, units of energy are defined by how much they heat water, so it's not hard to figure this one out.
Projection from http://www.eia.doe.gov/oiaf/ieo/world.html is that the world will use 645 quadrillion BTUs of energy per year in 2025. If we assume this all comes from the ocean at 100% efficiency, this would be enough to raise a patch of water, 100m deep by 1024km on a side, by 1 degree C. Insignificant next to the whole ocean? sure. But certainly significant compared to local or even regional climate variation! (not that hydrocarbons aren't worse, or that this can't be spread out but hey, now all the slashdot blather can be vaguely informed. sheesh).
I really, really doubt that this thing is practical. Organic Rankine Cycle Turbines (which are proposed) are very expensive to operate on dry land, as has been shown by research into solar thermal power in California. At least in those cases the efficiency was around 20%. The best they can hope for with OTEC is about 1.5% efficiency. Theoretically they could get 3.25% (Carnot efficiency), but experience with Organic Rankine Cycle Turbines has shown that 300C solar plants (Carnot Efficiency ~50%) only get around 20%, so one could expect to get about 1.25% efficiency out of their OTEC setup.
On top of this, all the equipment must be marine grade (ie., pricey). Power must be transferred to shore. It also must be a functioning ship with all the expense associated with that.
But what makes me most suspect is the claim of making fresh water. Ordinary Rankine Cycle Turbines do produce fresh water via distillation, but the Organic Rankine Cycle is a closed cycle and no fresh water is produced. The only condensation you'll get are hydrocarbons, which are recycled to create more vapour.
You're right, this does have zero emissions in terms of greenhouse gasses, and the production of clean, fresh water as a result of condensation is quite useful. However, as an article that's linked to by the original article notes, there may be consequences that would arise from dumping heat into cold water over the long term. The environmental impacts that can cause some real problems are often the unexpected ones. After all, climate change as a result of global warming wasn't really forseen at the start of the industrial revolution when we started burning a lot of fossil fuels. At that time it would have been basically assumed that the atmosphere was vast enough to hold a virtually unlimited amount of emissions, just as with this process it is being assumed that the deep water can hold a virtually unlimited amount of additional heat.
GET THEM INSIDE THE VAULT!
Correct me if I've got my wires crossed, but I thought the sea temperature was about a constant 4 degrees all the way down, once you get below a certain distance of the surface. The reason being, that water colder than 4 degrees has lower density, therefore always floats upwards. That's why the ocean isn't frozen at great depths. It doesn't mean you couldn't tap that gradient anyway, but the depth required presumably wouldn't be all that much as long as you'd got at least as far as the 4 degree level.
There is a version of solar that does not use photo voltaic cells. Remember the Sim City 2K solar power plant? It looks a lot like that. An array of mirrors reflects light into a dome atop a tower. The dome contains a circulating supply of water that is heated up into steam and used to drive a turbine. The mirrors are automatically angled to reflect the sun (at pretty much any angle) into the dome.
e rmal_electric_power_plants
No really nasty chemicals involved, and it uses technology that has been available for a really long time. I'm not sure about efficiency.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solar_power#Solar_th
See Concentrating solar power (CSP) plants.
Reading over it, it looks like it is not always water.
Fly me to the moon Let me sing among those stars Let me see what spring is like On jupiter and mars
In this case its survival of the smartest. Maybe the birds around the Altimont Pass are particularly stupid and are doing the rest a favour by removing themselves from the gene pool. If I look at my front window, a quarter mile away is one of the biggest wind turbines I've ever seen. Can't say I've spotted a single bird carcass lying on the ground underneath it.
Personally I don't believe wind turbines kill birds. I call bullshit. The blades just don't turn fast enough. And anyway, birds very quickly get out of the way of fast moving objects. When was the last time you ran over a bird in the road with your car? Drive at 'em as fast as you like. They see you coming and by the time you get there, they've moved.
Why does it matter whether the cycle is natural or not? Even if it did turn out to be a natural variation in climate, it's still going to have exactly the same effect on us as if it were caused by us.
What matters is whether or not the change in the world's weather patterns is going to make life on this planet difficult for us humans, and we don't really need a long historical analysis in order to determine that - we just need the short-term data & some decent climate models. And most of our current models are telling us that we're in deep doodoo and digging a hole deeper every day.
I'm not hearing any plans from our so-called leaders about what we are going to do about it - the loudest voices seem to be saying that we shouldn't do squat because they don't want to pay for it.
Even if we are incapable of changing the actual climate, then we should actually have a plan on how we (humanity) can adapt our lives to accomodate the changing conditions, but as far as I can tell the people with power & money are perfectly content to let the poor get fucked over while they (the well-off) are free to move to wherever is most comfortable to live.
"Research by raptor experts for the California Energy Commission (CEC) indicates that each year, Altamont Pass wind turbines kill an estimated 881 to 1,300 birds of prey"
/ bdes/altamont/altamont.html
That is not a large number at all, cars, buildings, pets, power lines, etc, etc kill WAY more than that. And the altamont pass is the single worst wind farm in north america for bird of prey deaths, because they were stupid and built it not only in the middle of a migratory path, but in the middle of the highest concentration of breeding golden eagles anywhere in the world, and with the blades positioned right at the typical altitude of those birds flight paths. This is exactly what caused the myth; old, improperly planned wind farms that haven't been fixed. Learn to find facts instead of just repeating nonsense you heard from whackjobs.
The fact that you think the tiny number of bird deaths produced by the worst wind farm on the continent is "substantial numbers" is just silly. And the fact that you pretend its indicative of modern, properly planned and constructed wind farms is just plain stupid. You can't say wind farms in general kill substantial numbers of birds just because a couple of bad wind farms were built.
The quote is from this page, there's more info there about what can be done to improve altamont specifically:
http://www.biologicaldiversity.org/swcbd/programs
Er, no. I challenge you to go somewhere up north, where there has been visible increases in the rate of ice shelf retreat and glacial calving, and say that global warming isn't really an issue. The world is getting warmer, period.
The question that I think you're alluding to, by "we don't know what the hell is happening to the environment" is that there's still a (somewhat) open debate as to whether the warming is caused by anything human beings did, or if it's part of some greater and not-yet-understood climactic cycle.
However in either situation, there are ongoing non-insigificant temperature increases and ice melt occurring, with resulting desalinization of regional oceans. The evidence for this is widespread and not in dispute by any reputable authority. Regardless of whether this is the result of fossil fuel consumption or "just nature," it's still something we're going to have to deal with the consequences of.
"Ladies and gentlemen, my killbot features Lotus Notes and a machine gun. It is the finest available."
It may, theoreticaly, result in the emission of some greenhouse gasses. Warming the lower depths of the ocean would reduce its ability to hold dissolved gasses such as methane and carbon dioxode.
On the other hand, it may not be a problem because tropical waters may never have been cold enough to hold much gas in the first place.
"Prefiero morir de pie que vivir siempre arrodillado!"
We're all forgetting about one massize cache of energy on our planet - American flab. Think of all the energy put into growing and/or producing the food that Americans have eaten to excess. If all (able-bodied) Americans were required to spend an hour or two a day on a power-generating bike, we could use up our "stored energy" [cough] and have a renewable, "green" power supply! Two birds with one stone. Let's face it - our calorie intake couldn't be any higher, even if we DID exercize a lot.
Yet again, I am reminded of Marshall Savages thought-provoking work, Colonizing the Galaxy in Eight Easy Steps. His belief is that the use of OTECs will relieve the world's energy problems, in addition to providing power for floating sea colonies, thus relieving population density. Furthering his premise, if I recall, the warm water will lead to an abundance of blue-green algae, which can be processed and used as a food source. These things, interestingly enough, are only a stop-gap until we can begin to expand life to places outside of this current biosphere.
Okay, maybe a tad off-topic, but I certainly find it fascinating.
"All power generating facilities are going to cause environmental damage"
Environmental changes. You can't just assume that those changes are "damage".
How pathetic are you that you follow me from topic to topic and waste all your mod points at once modding me down?
Abundant power plus abundant fresh water has the potential to completely remake the countries in the equatorial region...
For 20 years. Then the population will have had time to exceed the newly available resources, and they'll be in the same condition they are now, except there will be 5x more of them. The third world doesn't need energy, medicine, water, or food. Not the long run, as no matter how great the supply much of it will be stolen or ruined, and the population will just grow to exceed the supply. The third world needs education and the rule of law. Until they are able to form governments which aren't just 'top strongman of the week' they will never be able to harness resources for the good of the populace, and if they DO form such a government that can enforce laws and reduce corruption they will have no need for all these things, as they will be able to produce them rather easily. They have plenty of resources and mineral wealth. They just need to keep strongmen from stealing it long enough to harness what they have.
The energy needed to lift heavy things (like water) is greater than the energy in the temperature difference.
If you believe this then your entire post is suspect.
This process won't have to 'lift' any water. Since they are moving the water up in a tube which is surrounded by water, they are really just circulating water around, which requires very little energy. By your logic it would be impossible to coast on a bike, since you have to continually lift the part of the tire touching the ground all the way up to the height of the tire.