Tag: energy

Tesla Energy

A fitting memento on the day when Tesla announces plans to bring 50 GWh / year of li-ion battery online (current world production is 27 GWh): The Tesla induction motor has been called one of the 10 greatest inventions of all time.
2015-03-10: Check out this site visit at the first Gigafactory. When complete, it will be the largest footprint manufacturing building in the world. The scale can be deceiving; this 2-story structure is 24m tall.

2016-10-28: The powerwall is extremely impressive. The difference between wantrepreneurs like “secret” and actual ones is off the scale

Musk didn’t waste anybody’s time. He used that time to present a problem of critical importance (eliminating humanity’s use of fossil fuels), explained how it can be addressed, and offered a plausible solution in the form of a new product — one that’s priced within reach of a lot of people and available to order. Amazingly, all of those things are actually pretty rare to see in one show. Tesla’s presentation was inspiring, and Musk wasn’t selling some fancy scifi trinket that has the benefit of Star Trek nostalgia. Dude was selling a battery.

2019-06-07: Tesla has a big lead for dry batteries

Tesla cars have been able to last for 1.6M km but starting in 2020 the battery packs will be able to last for 1.6M km. Currently, the battery packs last for 500-800K km. Most non-electric cars only can last 160-320K km. Tesla will start using battery domination in 2020 with significantly longer lasting and higher energy density batteries. This will enable Tesla to use a mix of better prices and higher performance to win electric cars, electric trucks and with electric taxis.

2019-10-15: They’re investing in their battery manufacturing

Tesla bought Hibar Systems, a world leader in the development of battery manufacturing technology. Hibar is truly unique in its capability to provide the world’s leading manufacturers with innovative advanced automation solutions that are engineered specifically to suit their production automation requirements ranging from simple single station bottle filling systems to sophisticated high-speed assembly systems running in excess of 1000 parts per minute. This unique capability is made possible through Hibar’s vertically integrated structure.

2019-11-30: Over time, their batteries can get 3x cheaper

Lithium Ion batteries can get 3x cheaper than current average prices of $180 per kwh to $50-60 per kwh.

2020-10-02: By doing all this, they’re speeding up the industry by decades.

If Tesla achieves the goals of Battery Day then they bring forward the electrification of transportation and energy by decades. BloombergNEF projected lithium-ion batteries to halve their cost by 2030. Tesla plans to halve the cost by 2023. Half of what Tesla would do in 2030 and 2031 would surpass the cumulative projection of energy storage installations by 2040.

2020-10-21: They’ve, as of late 2020, achieved 5m km lifespans. This is enough charge cycles to last 25 years, longer than the cars, so the batteries can be reused for other applications, and can do other functions like grid storage.

If batteries become 2x cheaper over 7 years and 120 Gigabattery factories are made then combustion engine cars are replaced and Tesla is worth 50x more than today.

Geothermal

The well funneled steam for months at temperatures of over 450°C – a world record. Geothermals rarely reach higher than 60-80°C. The magma-heated steam generates 36MW of electrical power, considerably more than the 1-3MW of an average wind turbine.

Can enormous heat deep in the earth be harnessed to provide energy for us on the surface? A promising report from a geothermal borehole project that accidentally struck magma – the same fiery, molten rock that spews from volcanoes – suggests it could.

2021-07-06: The prospects for geothermal

If we want not just to replace current energy consumption with low-CO2 sources, but also to, say, increase global energy output by 10x, we need to look beyond wind and solar. Nuclear fission would be an excellent option if it were not so mired in regulatory obstacles. Fusion could do it, but it still needs a lot of work. Next-generation geothermal could have the right mix of policy support, technology readiness, and resource size to make a big contribution to abundant clean energy in the near future. Combining the planet’s reserves of uranium, seawater uranium, lithium, thorium, and fossil fuels yields 365K zetajoules. There is 41x as much crustal thermal energy than energy in all those sources combined. (Total heat content of the planet, including the mantle and the core, is ~1000x higher.)

What if we had much better drilling technology? Put aside the fancy stuff, like horizontal segments—what if we could simply drill straight down into the earth much deeper and faster and cheaper than we can today? This one capability would unlock a huge increase in geothermal power density. With depth comes higher temperatures. If we could cheaply and reliably access temperatures around 500ºC, we could make water go supercritical. This would unleash a step-change in enthalpy, without the closed loops otherwise needed for supercritical fluids. By doing EGS (concept #1) in these hotter conditions, we could get the biggest benefit of EGS—a high surface area to use to transfer heat—with one of the biggest benefits of closed-loop systems—the use of a supercritical working fluid. In addition to higher enthalpy, supercritical steam will produce higher electrical output in virtue of a higher delta-T in the generator cycle. Output of the cycle is directly proportional to the temperature differential between the steam and ambient conditions.


2022-02-08: New ways of drilling

If you want to reduce the cost of drilling really deep holes, you need a drilling system that doesn’t break as it comes in contact with granite, can handle high temperatures and pressures, and that doesn’t require tripping. Is there a way to use pure energy to obliterate the granite? That is what Quaise Energy is working on. The company is developing a drilling system that uses gyrotron-generated mm-wave directed energy to vaporize granite.

If Quaise succeeds, high-efficiency geothermal energy becomes available everywhere on the planet. No matter where you are on Earth, if you go deep enough, it is hot. By targeting 500ºC heat at depth, Quaise will be able to produce supercritical steam at the wellhead. If we could produce supercritical steam from the ground, we could convert our dirty coal plants into 0-CO2 electricity sources by simply piping the steam from the ground into the turbines.

2022-07-30: More detailed look at the economics

There is a 5% chance geothermal delivers more than 10% of our electricity. And that estimate won’t change until more improvement comes.

More than one technology needs commercialization to achieve <$20/MWh. The heat engine problem is critical to solve and should drive further engineering decisions. The numbers won’t work in many places building new steam power plants. Repowering coal plants or better thermoelectric generators provide the most flexibility in solving the other challenges. A supercritical CO2 power cycle likely requires almost perfect execution elsewhere. Improvement in drilling costs is also non-negotiable. If techniques to increase heat transfer via fracturing don’t work, methods to use directional tools in high-temperature, high-pressure environments become a requirement.

Geothermal has incredible potential but has a tortuous path to market given the stiff competition from other electricity generation sources and mismatches in markets, technology, and regulation. Improving drilling technology to reach depths that can create supercritical steam for existing coal plants is likely the fastest and highest probability path to a 10% market share.

2023-02-12: A modest proposal

Through a new copper-based engineering approach on an unprecedented scale, this paper proposes a safe means to draw up the mighty energy reserve of the Yellowstone Supervolcano from within the Earth, to superheat steam for spinning turbines at sufficient speed and on a sufficient scale, in order to power the entire USA. The proposed, single, multi-redundant facility utilizes the star topology in a grid array pattern to accomplish this. Over time, bleed-off of sufficient energy could potentially forestall this supervolcano from ever erupting again. 11 Quadrillion Watt hours of electrical energy generated over the course of 1 year, to meet the current and future needs of the USA is shown to be practical.

2023-03-23: Repurposing fossil fuel tech

There’s already signs that spillovers are happening. The US government has developed a fluid to fracture impermeable rocks to open up more geothermal reservoirs, a process identical to the one that frackers use in petroleum deposits. Start-up Eavor Technologies Inc. plans to use the horizontal drilling pioneered by the unconventional oil and gas industry to build radiator-like networks of pipes in areas that would otherwise be unsuitable for development.
Shell Plc set up a geothermal division in 2018 that’s been exploring the potential of the technology to provide heat for buildings and industry in the Netherlands. Baker Hughes Co., the former oilfield services division of General Electric Co., has developed deep, high-temperature drilling technologies to tap reservoirs that can produce heat more efficiently than conventional ones.
There’s even proposals to use the technologies to produce other materials crucial to the energy transition. Current geothermal wells operating near California’s Salton Sea might be able to extract enough lithium from underground brines to meet US demand 10x over. One of the world’s few operating green hydrogen facilities is powered by a geothermal plant just outside Iceland’s capital Reykjavik.

2023-04-25: More on that Yellowstone proposal

Trying to build an enormous geothermal power plant and associated transmission lines(!) in one of the most beloved National Parks(!!), which there’s specifically a law against (!!!), and which could potentially trigger a civilization-destroying volcanic eruption (!!!!) is like the final boss of the permitting reform movement.

2023-07-03: There’s been a lot of drilling progress

The geothermal technology flywheel is getting close to being self-sustaining. Commercial closed-loop projects should be operational within the next 2-3 years. They will spark copycats if they are successful. Companies pursuing other technologies can switch immediately by changing vendors and their well design, similar to how many solar thermal projects converted to photovoltaics.

Talent isn’t an issue in North America or Europe because the oil industry constantly trains and sheds workers due to the market cycle. Geothermal companies can hoover up the laid-off and disillusioned. It could be an issue in the areas of the world with thin oilfield service markets.

Process heat should be more profitable than electricity, but companies love touting electricity because of the large addressable market. Electricity is trendy! There should be demand for repeatable, low-risk architectures in either application, but electricity will require subsidies or favorable market rules in most locations for now. I’d recommend caution to any lobbyists trying to alter electricity markets to favor zero carbon, dispatchable power plants with >90% percent capacity factors and onsite fuel. Other technologies might find geothermal power plants producing $50/MWh electricity with sub 2-year construction times hard to beat!

Having the chance to get in the game and hone your craft is all you can ask for. Geothermal looks like it will get that chance. That could drop the cost of delivering process heat precipitously while the power plant portion of capital expenditure would quickly dominate electricity production cost. Developers and service companies will incrementally improve depth and temperature to increase the addressable market. Competition looms from other carbon-free process heat technologies and renewables firming techniques. Only time will tell if geothermal can gain a foothold in providing heat or earn a double-digit share of the electricity market.

2023-11-21: Learning rates are looking promising

Heat-only closed-loop geothermal using conventional drilling technology has the fastest scaling potential of any geothermal variant. It takes much longer to iterate on fracture design, build/interconnect power plants, or develop new drilling technology. There is no shortage of market opportunity with heat. Something like half of Europe’s energy use is heat, and most is theoretically addressable by geothermal. China’s district heating systems use as much energy as the United Kingdom.

The smaller service footprint also eases the scaling of labor and equipment. Producing 3000 drilling rigs instead of 1000 rigs is simpler than ramping production of every drilling and completion service item. Geothermal companies with heat purchase agreements can sign long-term rig contracts that allow manufacturers to borrow money for working capital and faster scaling. Fast growth isn’t guaranteed, but the supply chain shouldn’t be the limiter.

Magnetic monopoles

Magnetic monopoles would be miraculous technology if we can scale up production. Hovercars are one of the more pedestrian uses, to give you an idea.

It’s not every day that you get to poke and prod the analog of an elusive fundamental particle under highly controlled conditions in the lab.” He added that creation of synthetic electric and magnetic fields is a new and rapidly expanding branch of physics that may lead to the development and understanding of entirely new materials, such as higher-temperature superconductors for the lossless transmission of electricity. The team’s discovery of the synthetic monopole provides a stronger foundation for current searches for magnetic monopoles that have even involved the famous Large Hadron Collider at CERN.

Bestek Wall Charger

The Bestek MRJ1870-1 wall charging station provides the best bang-for-the-buck in its class I’ve seen yet. Most travel chargers are inadequate for contemporary, gadget-laden needs. Compare it with another $20 charger I bought before getting the Bestek: the Belkin BST300. It has 3 power outlets and 2 USB ports. The catch is that USB ports share 2.1A, which can’t be relied on to simultaneously charge both an iPad-sized tablet and a second device. I actually couldn’t even charge a single iPad (4th-gen) alone on the ill-equipped Belkin charger.

Consumer Thermal Imaging

this an awkward implementation, but i welcome the addition of new sensors. being able to find and fix those spots where you’re leaking heat is very empowering.

FLIR Systems launched the FLIR ONE, the first consumer-oriented thermal imaging system for a smartphone.

2015-01-06: Given the embarrassing quality of most houses in the us, a bit of public leak shaming would be great.

Drive-by heat mapping from MIT spinoff Essess can quickly track energy leaks.

Energy futures

much smaller, higher efficiency turbines are coming (a boring but crucial part), and renewables will finally drop below utility cost in ~2 years. that makes large scale grids unsustainable, and will lead to smaller, decentralized plants. which is also great for resiliency.

Antimatter production

we live in a very bipolar world. on the one hand, people continue being idiots at unprecedented scale (largely twitter’s fault: it makes it far too easy for dumb people to be heard and is thus net negative for society), on the other hand we get anti aging, private space companies, clean tech, and now this.

Nuclear fusion or any larger power source that can be put into space combined with superconductors will enable antimatter production that can be 100K to 1M times more efficient in terms of cost than earth based systems.

Solar powered charging

this is pretty nice. of course it would be much better if everyone standardized on micro usb instead of crappy one-off plugs like apple does.

25 solar-powered charging stations will sprout in parks, beaches and other outdoor spaces in the 5 boroughs, part of a pilot project from the wireless provider in partnership with the city.