Wednesday, October 8, 2008

2008 Sea Ice Volume

I almost missed reading this item, but took a double take when I understood that they are addressing volume.
They have even stated the year 2013 as a possibility. This is very early confirmation that the gross ice volume is even lower than 2007 which I thought probable in my earlier postings.

My readers can expect all the experts to pile on to this date now that it is clear that the Northern sea ice is in collapse unless a drastic cold spell hits soon. After all, once the decline is completely discernable it is a surety that it is in the end game already and you are no longer waiting for decades.

Again, a minimal mathematical analysis as I have described in earlier posts shows that a persistent loss of ice will terminate as a collapse.

If we have a reasonable winter and an early start to the spring, we can expect even more dramatics next year.

For the past two seasons, the Northwest Passage was very navigatable provided an ice breaker was on standby to provide assistance if necessary. That alone is hard to believe. This year, friendly winds opened the Northeast Passage.

They do make the comment that the Arctic could become ice free. I do not think that will be totally possible because the rotation of the gyre will retain some ice every season, but that ice will be destroyed in the coming season as the rotation takes the ice away from the colder zones.

Whether an over the pole route ever becomes feasible seems unlikely because of this.

Arctic Sea Ice Shrinks to Record Low

Experts Say Thickness, Overall Amount of Ice at Troubling Low

By CLAYTON SANDELL

Oct. 3, 2008

Sea ice at the top of the planet has apparently reached the lowest volume ever recorded, say scientists, with conditions declining toward a point where the Arctic Ocean may soon be completely ice-free in summertime.

The Advanced Microwave Scanning Radiometer (AMSR-E), a high-resolution passive microwave Instrument on NASA's Aqua satellite shows the state of Arctic sea ice on September 10 in this image released September 16, 2008.


While final numbers are still coming in, experts at the National Snow and Ice Data Center in Boulder, Colo., believe the overall volume of Arctic sea ice -- determined by measuring the area covered and the thickness of ice -- has reached the lowest level since satellite measurements began in 1979.

"We're pretty confident this is a record low," said Walt Meier, a research scientist at
the center.

Meier and his colleagues monitor the health of Arctic sea ice by looking at many factors, including the extent of sea ice -- how much can be seen from space -- and the thickness of ice hidden underwater, to calculate the overall volume.

"It's like a building and a Hollywood set of a building," Meier said. "You take a picture of both of those, and they look exactly the same. But if you go and peer around the corner, one is thick, and one isn't. And so, what we're seeing now is that ice, that used to be like a building, is kind of becoming more like a Hollywood movie set."

Experts say that much of the thicker Arctic sea ice -- which takes years to develop but is more robust -- has been replaced by younger, "first year" ice that is thinner and more prone to melting. In March 2008, data showed that a record 73 percent of the sea ice in the Arctic was made up of the thinner ice.

"The arctic is fundamentally changing in character, and we're going to continue this downward trend and eventually reach the point when we have entire sea-ice melts during the summertime," Meier said.

Experts warn that, without Arctic sea ice, there will be major, if unknown, consequences far beyond the top of the planet. The region acts as a giant air conditioner for the planet, helping stabilize global temperature and weather patterns in lower latitudes, like the jet stream.

"You're changing the equation," Meier said. "And that's going to potentially change traditional wind patterns, ocean currents, and storm tracks. And which way the wind blows has tremendous impact in certain areas, particularly on where it rains and when it rains."

Less sea ice also exposes darker water, which absorbs more energy from the sun. That, in turn, melts even more ice.

2007 broke the record for the lowest extent of sea ice, and 2008 came in second. The third-lowest year on record is 2005, part of a dramatic downward trend that has lasted three decades and doesn't appear to be slowing.

Going forward, experts say, there may be some cooler years when the sea ice may not melt as much. But the long-term trend toward warmer temperatures makes a recovery unlikely.

"We don't see it turning around," Meier said.

He believes that the Arctic could be ice-free in summertime by around 2030 or 2040, but he says more pessimistic estimates predict that could happen as soon as 2013.

"Five years ago, if you'd gone to a conference of scientists and said, 'by 2013 the Arctic sea ice in summertime is going to be gone,' you might have been laughed out of the room," he said.

"No one is laughing now."

Tuesday, October 7, 2008

Graphene

Of course I love this stuff. Unfortunately it is all still very much in a lab somewhere and must take a lot of gestation. The vanadium battery, which requires no special manufacturing design input has so far been gestating for twenty years.

This is still worth knowing about even though it very much a lab curiosity similar to nanotubes. However, if it could ever be made cheaply enough, it promises to be an excellent material for manufacturing a high density ultra capacitor. Right now we are just beginning to speculate.

Solution chemistry does not need magic at the manufacturing level to work, which is why it has dominated battery design. And Vanadium chemistry works because it does not consume the furniture.

So though graphene is obviously a wonderful material, it is also just as likely unavailable for decades.

What is intriguing is that it is working at the property levels of diamonds. Imagining a manufacturing process that can produce something like this, beggars the imagination. So I remain rather skeptical. We have had buckyballs for forty years and nanotubes almost as long. Both showed up naturally as combustion products if I recall correctly.

It would be wonderful to see a one atom thick sheet rolling out of a machine and carbon is the one element that could do it.



Jay Draiman has left a new comment on your post "Vanadium Battery Discover Acticle": Ultracapacitors may be the answer to energy storage

Regenerative braking strategies are moving beyond automobiles and into the more broad category of regenerative. What goes up must come down! Is now as applicable as What speeds up must slow down!
Many industries can significantly reduce their carbon footprint by designing ultracapacitors into their machinery. The goals is regeneration of lost energy. Similar to regeneration of lost energy during braking, other machinery loses energy.

As an example, construction and cargo cranes can recapture lost energy to be utilized as an assist to bring the crane back up. Another example is an elevator. Elevators come in many sizes. From freight and passenger elevators to mining and aircraft elevators. The amount of energy that is lost during the decent is immense and designing a bank of ultracapacitor to instantly catch this energy is not difficult. Braking is aided by a motor that acts as a generator, converting kinetic energy to electrical energy. If the electrical energy is passed through brake resistors, the energy gets dissipated as Joule heat; if it is captured by energy storage device such as ultracapacitors, there will be less heat dissipation + regeneration.

Or, you may want to use the energy in as a backup emergency system in the event of a power failure. For example, how many times have we experienced a ‘stuck’ elevator. We have heard of people spending hours and even days in these situations. With ultracapacitors, you can have enough energy storage to get the elevator to the designated floor with the doors open.

Many industries can significantly reduce their carbon footprint by designing ultracapacitors into their machinery. If you have an application that could benefit from regeneration of lost energy or emergency power backup and would like to know a deeper understanding of how a it could be designed into your application, all you have to do is ask an expert in this field.

So far, ultracapacitors sweet spot has been applications that require quick burst of high power and can quickly be recharged

Many applications capture the braking energy to replenish the ultracapacitorss (examples: buses, trucks, trains, and elevators). This sweet spot may be changing due to a recent nanotechnology discovery.
University of Texas at Austin, mechanical engineering professor Rod Ruoff has achieved a breakthrough in ultracapacitors by using "graphene". Ruoff says, “Graphene’s surface area of 2630 m2/gram (almost the area of a football field in about 1/500th of a pound of material) means that a greater number of positive or negative ions in the electrolyte can form a layer on the graphene sheets resulting in exceptional levels of stored charge.”

After about nine months of research with the new material, they have shown storage abilities similar to those of ultracapacitors already on the market, and they believe graphene's ultra thin structure will allow for sheets of the material to be stacked to increase energy storage and possibly double the current capacity of ultracapacitors. This would allow ultracapacitors to expand into many other renewable and clean energy application for both solar power and wind farms.
Graphene is a one atom thick structure of bonded carbon atoms that are densely packed in a honeycomb crystal lattice. It is best described as an atomic scale chicken wire of carbon atoms and their bonds.
Graphene is strong enough to withstand diamond cutters and is one of the most expensive materials available today. Since it is currently so expensive, it will require some development before it is economical viable for mass production in ultracapacitors. \

This research is exciting and maybe we will see the "new super battery" sooner than we think.

Graphene racks up the charge

25 September 2008

Researchers in the US have used graphene, sheets of carbon that are just one atom thick, to improve the performance of energy-storage devices which could supersede batteries in electric cars.

Rod Ruoff and colleagues at the University of Texas at Austin say the vast surface area of graphene can be exploited to store greater amounts of charge in an ultracapacitor - a device that combines the advantages of a capacitor and a battery.1

Batteries store and release chemical energy slowly and are apt to degrade over time - but they can pack in huge amounts of charge. Traditional capacitors, meanwhile, soak up and release electrical charge in rapid bursts - useful when starting power-hungry engines - but can't store much of it. Ultracapacitors have a storage capacity many thousands of times greater than conventional capacitors, though they need to improve still further to rival battery storage.

'If we could get the energy density of an ultracapacitor to the level of a lead acid battery this would be a massive step forward - and maybe graphene could do this,' says Ruoff.

Ultracapacitors work by suspending electrodes with high surface area - such as highly porous carbon - in an electrolyte. When the electrode is charged with ions or electrons, the electrolyte polarises so that oppositely-charged ions nestle against the electrode surface, producing a highly dense electrical charge within the electrode.

'Because graphene has such a high surface area, if all of it were available to polarise the electrolyte the amount of charge we could dump on it would be very high,' says Ruoff. The researchers used a previously developed technique to make chemically modified sheets of graphene - starting with graphite oxide, shaving it into thin strips, and then chemically reducing the oxide to create carbon sheets one atom thick possessing a small amount of oxygen, hydrogen and nitrogen. The flexible sheets are then mixed with an electrolyte such as potassium hydroxide. They wrap themselves around the electrolyte, forming a close association.

In this way the US team made an ultracapacitor that could store 135 farads per gram of material, comparable to good current ultracapacitors. Ruoff says theoretical predictions suggest graphene's ability to store electrical charge could be about double that of current commercially used materials.

There has been a flurry of interest recently in the use of carbon nanotubes as electrode materials for ultracapacitors, but Ruoff believes that graphene could have the edge over these materials. 'With nanotubes much of the inner surface area can remain inaccessible to the electrolyte,' he says.

One recent exotic example of an ultracapacitor based on carbon nanotubes has been described by researchers in China, who attached highly porous clumps of manganese oxide ions onto stalks of carbon nanotubes protruding from a metal foil. The high porosity of the manganese oxide allows it to harbour a high density of ions, enabling the structure to hold around twice as much charge as conventional ultracapacitors.

Mike Barnes, who works with ultracapacitors at the University of Manchester in the UK, is impressed by Ruoff's modified graphene device. 'The system they are using seems to give very competitive results even at this early stage of the research process,' he comments.

Simon Hadlington

Monday, October 6, 2008

Industrial Biochar fuels the farm

What is promising is that the knowledge of the agricultural utility of biochar is slowly creeping into major development programs such as those described below. Recognition that residual biochar has a better place as a soil building agent than as a fuel is changing researcher’s approach to the waste management problem.

This bodes well for the future. One can see that this is a welcome solution to the major problem facing industrial scale animal husbandry of the effective disposal of manures. These can no longer be simply spread on the surrounding soil because of damage to the environment. So running the material through a wet thermochemical process with a top temperature of 350C is very appealing now that we know that the solid portion is highly suitable as a soil additive.

We are seeing an industry shift over to a superior and truly unexpected economic model. We can soon expect the resultant biochar, and the reported temperature is producing reduced carbon, if not activated carbon, to be sold at the farm gate.

Once agribusiness itself begins to dispose of its waste streams as a 350 degree carbon product to other operators, the rest of the industry will quickly follow suit. Right now the hardware itself is been figured out.

I may be optimistic, but the acceptance of biochar protocols is inevitable and this work shows us that that is the emerging consensus. That five thousand year field test in Brazil has silenced all the usual naysayers who would surely slow the adoption. Recall that the vanadium battery is how twenty years old and it still attracts naysayers who lack any scientific support for their position.

Terra preta has only in the past year really begun to penetrate public consciousness. Prior to that, we had a few lonely articles by a few academic champions. Now field tests are springing up throughout the globe.

Within perhaps five years, every farmer will be clamoring for the stuff. And yes Virginia, there will be millions of new acres of agricultural land brought on stream because of this.


Fueling the FarmWaste for Energy and Independence

Imagine turning a noxious agricultural waste into a value-added bioenergy product for on-farm heating and power—or even into transportation fuels.

Agricultural engineer Keri Cantrell, environmental engineer Kyoung Ro, and research leader Patrick Hunt work at the
ARS Coastal Plains Soil, Water, and Plant Research Center in Florence, South Carolina. They have teamed up to explore how thermochemical conversion technologies could be used to generate bioenergy from manure—a resource that the United States, with its intensive livestock production, has in abundance.

“Our goal is to develop new waste-treatment methods and strategies that small farms and concentrated animal-production facilities could use to meet their energy needs,” Cantrell says.

One approach—wet gasification—converts wet manure slurry into energy-rich gases and relatively clean water. The catalytic version of this technology is under development at the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) Pacific Northwest National Laboratory. This process is expected to destroy pathogens and has been found to destroy odor-generating volatile organic compounds at the processing conditions of 350˚C.

At this high temperature, wet gasification can destroy pharmaceutically active components like hormones. This process could theoretically convert the manure in as little as 15 minutes, far exceeding the days and months required by existing anaerobic and composting methods.

The Florence researchers developed a cost-benefit model of wet gasification to calculate estimated returns and concluded that liquid swine waste can have a net energy potential comparable to that of brown coal.

In addition, the ARS team is investigating pyrolysis technology, which uses heat and an atmosphere devoid of oxygen to convert the manure into a char, or “green coal.”

“Green coal can serve as an energy source for on-farm use, or it can be transported to coal power plants for feedstock,” Ro says. “It can also be transformed into activated charcoal. This charcoal can be applied to soil to improve soil quality, and it also reduces greenhouse gases by permanently sequestering carbon.”

The group is also working in collaboration with the Advanced Fuels Group at the DOE Brookhaven National Laboratory in New York. They are evaluating different catalysts needed to facilitate conversion of “syngas”—the gas produced when animal wastes and other biomass are gasified—to liquid fuels.

“Computers used to take up the basement of the math building,” Hunt says. “We’d like to be able to shrink down a process to run the farm engine in the same way.” With this kind of system, farmers would be able to produce their own energy sources and eliminate the need to transport manure offsite. The trick is to make the system productive and affordable.

The Florence researchers know that the benefits of any biofuel must be weighed against its economic and environmental production costs. “The truly exciting reality is that numerous needs in energy, nutrient recycling, climate change, and biosecurity will foster synergistic development of technology for future agriculture,” Hunt says. “Our research is only one part of the answer as we look for new energy supplies.”—By
Ann Perry, Agricultural Research Service Information Staff.

This research is part of Manure and Byproduct Utilization, an ARS national program (#206) described on the World Wide Web at
www.nps.ars.usda.gov.

Keri B. Cantrell, Patrick G. Hunt, and Kyoung S. Ro are with the USDA-ARS Coastal Plains Soil, Water, and Plant Research Center, 2611 W. Lucas St., Florence, SC 29501-1242; phone (843) 669-5203, ext. 113 [Cantrell], ext. 101 [Hunt], ext. 107 [Ro], fax (843) 669-6970.

Thursday, October 2, 2008

Solar Surface

This item from NASA tells us that the surface of the sun is more interesting than thought. We already have the sunspot phenomena to spin theories about. We now are able to discern variation of the surface skin. This is important because the radiation from the sun originates from this layer or at least interacts with it. Thus we have another variable that was not anticipated.

How this might affect total solar output variation is as yet a mystery, but at least we have this.

In the meantime, this year has had the highest number of sunspot free days in fifty years. I am aware that some expect that this presages a wave of global cooling and perhaps the onset of a little ice age. What they do not mention is that we had a number of similar years back in the nineteenth century. It is way too early to draw such conclusions I believe.

What I find promising though is that we are actually winkling out measurable independent variables with our tools and this means that hypothesis can be made and tentatively tested to see if our ideas work.

This quiet period is also allowing for undisturbed measurement which means a much higher resolution than ordinarily possible.

Slowly but surely, we are describing the solar system.

How round is the Sun?

Oct. 2, 2008: Scientists using NASA's RHESSI spacecraft have measured the roundness of the sun with unprecedented precision, and they find that it is not a perfect sphere. During years of high solar activity the sun develops a thin "cantaloupe skin" that significantly increases its apparent oblateness. Their results appear the Oct. 2nd edition of Science Express.

"The sun is the biggest and smoothest natural object in the solar system, perfect at the 0.001% level because of its extremely strong gravity," says study co-author Hugh Hudson of UC Berkeley. "Measuring its exact shape is no easy task."

The team did it by analyzing data from the Reuven Ramaty High-Energy Solar Spectroscopic Imager, RHESSI for short, an x-ray/gamma-ray space telescope launched in 2002 on a mission to study solar flares. Although RHESSI was never intended to measure the roundness of the sun, it has turned out ideal for the purpose.
RHESSI observes the solar disk through a narrow slit and spins at 15 rpm. The spacecraft's rapid rotation and high data sampling rate (necessary to catch fast solar flares) make it possible for investigators to trace the shape of the sun with systematic errors much less than any previous study. Their technique is particularly sensitive to small differences in polar vs. equatorial diameter or "oblateness."

"We have found that the surface of the sun has rough structure: bright ridges arranged in a network pattern, as on the surface of a cantaloupe but much more subtle," describes Hudson. During active phases of the solar cycle, these ridges emerge around the sun's equator, brightening and fattening the "stellar waist." At the time of RHESSI's measurements in 2004, ridges increased the sun's apparent equatorial radius by an angle of 10.77 +- 0.44 milli-arcseconds, or about the same as the width of a human hair viewed one mile away.

"That may sound like a very small angle, but it is in fact significant," says Alexei Pevtsov, RHESSI Program Scientist at NASA Headquarters. Tiny departures from perfect roundness can, for example, affect the sun's gravitational pull on Mercury and skew tests of Einstein's theory of relativity that depend on careful measurements of the inner planet's orbit. Small bulges are also telltale signs of hidden motions inside the sun. For instance, if the sun had a rapidly rotating core left over from early stages of star formation, and if that core were tilted with respect to its outer layers, the result would be surface bulging. "RHESSI's precision measurements place severe constraints on any such models."

The "cantaloupe ridges" are magnetic in nature. They outline giant, bubbling convection cells on the surface of the sun called "supergranules." Supergranules are like bubbles in a pot of boiling water amplified to the scale of a star; on the sun they measure some 30,000 km across (twice as wide as Earth) and are made of seething hot magnetized plasma. Magnetic fields at the center of these bubbles are swept out to the edge where they form ridges of magnetism. The ridges are most prominent during years around Solar Max when the sun's inner dynamo "revs up" to produce the strongest magnetic fields. Solar physicists have known about supergranules and the magnetic network they produce for many years, but only now has RHESSI revealed their unexpected connection to the sun's oblateness.

In this diagram, the sun's oblateness has been magnified 10,000 times for easy visibility. The blue curve traces the sun's shape averaged over a three month period. The black asterisked curve traces a shorter 10-day average. The wiggles in the 10-day curve are real, caused by strong magnetic ridges in the vicinity of sunspots.
"When we subtract the effect of the magnetic network, we get a 'true' measure of the sun's shape resulting from gravitational forces and motions alone," says Hudson. "The corrected oblateness of the non-magnetic sun is 8.01 +- 0.14 milli-arcseconds, near the value expected from simple rotation."

"These results have far ranging implications for solar physics and theories of gravity," comments solar physicist David Hathaway of the NASA Marshall Space Flight Center. "They indicate that the core of the sun cannot be rotating much more rapidly than the surface, and that the sun's oblateness is too small to change the orbit of Mercury outside the bounds of Einstein's General Theory of Relativity."

Further analysis of RHESSI oblateness data could also help researchers detect a long-sought type of seismic wave echoing through the interior of the sun: gravitational oscillations or "g-modes." The ability to monitor g-modes would open a new frontier in solar physics—the study of the sun's internal core.

"All of this," marvels Hathaway, "comes from clever use of data from a satellite designed for something entirely different. Congratulations to the RHESSI team!"

The paper reporting these results, "A large excess in apparent solar oblateness due to surface magnetism," was authored by Martin Fivian, Hugh Hudson, Robert Lin and Jabran Zahid, and appears in the Oct. 2nd issue of Science Express.

Vanadium Battery Discover Acticle

This article just published online a couple of days ago does an excellent job of singing the praises of the vanadium redox battery system. I have copied the text here for my readers. The article makes little comment on the carrying reagent, perhaps to keep unnecessary speculation under control. I believe that the first generation was based on sulphuric acid which seems a natural first step. I believe that the present work is been done using bromide chemistry and we can be sure that others are been worked with.



The energy density has been improved to about twice originally achieved and eventually may crawl higher. However, this is still a fifth of conventional batteries and major improvement there surely cannot be expected.



We can expect ultimately an improvement on the cost of the vanadium itself as demand expands and other source materials are utilized.



The real attack on costs has to come with the mass production of the all critical membrane. From what I have read so far, this appears to be early days and custom manufacturing prices that have no relationship to mass production costs. Otherwise everything else is almost off the shelf and suitable for aggressive cost cutting.



Sumitomo has clearly cut its teeth on pursuing engineered solutions in industrial settings were the capital costs can be justified. They have been very successful.



The bottom line is that the technology works and is the present best practice for a static application. Hopefully we do not have to wait another twenty years to bring capital costs down.


Technology - Alternative Energy - The Element That Could Change the World

Making green energy work may depend on three unlikely heroes: an Australian engineer, a battery, and the element vanadium.

by Bob Johnstone

published online September 29, 2008

February 27, 2008, was a bad day for renewable energy. A cold front moved through West Texas, and the winds died in the evening just as electricity demand was peaking. Generation from wind power in the region rapidly plummeted from 1.7 gigawatts to only 300 megawatts (1 megawatt is enough to power about 250 average-size houses). The sudden loss of electricity supply forced grid operators to cut power to some offices and factories for several hours to prevent statewide blackouts.

By the next day everything was back to normal, but the Texas event highlights a huge, rarely discussed challenge to the adoption of wind and solar power on a large scale. Unlike fossil fuel plants, wind turbines and photovoltaic cells cannot be switched on and off at will: The wind blows when it blows and the sun shines when it shines, regardless of demand. Even though Texas relies on wind for just over 3 percent of its electricity, that is enough to inject uncertainty into the state's power supplies. The problem is sure to grow more acute as states and utilities press for the expanded use of zero-carbon energy. Wind is the fastest-growing power source in the United States, solar is small but also building rapidly, and California is gearing up to source 20 percent of its power from renewables by 2017.

Experts reckon that when wind power provides a significant portion of the electricity supply (with "significant" defined as about 10 percent of grid capacity), some form of energy storage will be essential to keeping the grid stable. "Without storage, renewables will find it hard to make it big," says Imre Gyuk, manager of energy systems research at the U.S. Department of Energy.

Fortunately, there is a promising solution on the horizon: an obscure piece of technology known as the vanadium redox flow battery. This unusual battery was invented more than 20 years ago by Maria Skyllas-Kazacos, a tenacious professor of electro­chemistry at the University of New South Wales in Sydney, Australia. The vanadium battery has a marvelous advantage over lithium-ion and most other types of batteries. It can absorb and release huge amounts of electricity at the drop of a hat and do so over and over, making it ideal for smoothing out the flow from wind turbines and solar cells.

Skyllas-Kazacos's invention, in short, could be the thing that saves renewable energy's bacon.

To the engineers who maintain the electrical grid, one of the greatest virtues of a power supply is predictability, and that is exactly why renewable energy gives them the willies. Nuclear- and fossil fuel–powered plants produce electricity that is, in industry speak, "dispatchable"; that means it can be controlled from second to second to keep the grid balanced, so the amount of energy being put into the wires exactly matches demand. If the grid goes out of balance, power surges can damage transmission lines and equipment. Generators are therefore designed to protect themselves by going off-line if the grid becomes unstable. Sometimes this can amplify a small fluctuation into a cascading disaster, which is what happened in the northeastern United States and eastern Canada in August 2003, plunging 50 million people into a blackout. Unless the reliability of renewable energy sources can be improved, as these sources contribute more and more electricity to the grid, engineers will have an increasingly difficult time keeping the system balanced. This raises the specter of more blackouts, which nobody would tolerate. "We want to make renewables truly dispatchable so we can deliver given amounts of electricity at a given time," Gyuk says.

The way to make renewables more reliable is to store the excess electricity generated during times of plenty (when there are high winds, for instance, or strong sun) and release it later to match the actual demand. Utilities have been using various storage techniques for decades. Hydroelectric plants, for instance, often draw on reservoirs to generate additional electricity at peak times, and then pump some of the water back uphill in off-peak periods. Compressed air is another, less common form of large-scale energy storage. It can be pumped into underground cavities and tapped later. These technologies have been suggested as ways of storing renewable energy, but both approaches rely on unusual geographical conditions.

"For most of us right now, the real key to effective storage is batteries," says Jim Kelly, senior vice president of transmission and distribution at Southern California Edison. Specifically, what is needed is a battery that can store enough energy to pull an entire power station through a rough patch, can be charged and discharged over and over, and can release large amounts of electricity at a moment's notice. Several promising battery technologies are already in early-stage commercialization, but the vanadium battery may have the edge in terms of scalability and economy.

We need a rechargeable battery that can store enough energy to pull a power station through a rough patch And release Electricity at a moment's notice.

Like the battery in your cell phone or car, vanadium batteries are rechargeable, but chemically and structurally they go their own way. A vanadium battery consists of three main components: a stack where the electricity is generated and two tanks that hold liquid electrolytes. An electrolyte is any substance containing atoms or molecules that have positive or negative electrical charges. These charged atoms or molecules are known as ions, and the amount of charge on an ion is known as its oxidation state. In a battery, electrolytes are used as an energy storage medium. When two electrolytes, each containing ions with different oxidation states, are allowed to exchange charges, the result is an electric current. The technical term for this kind of charge exchange is a redox reaction, which is why the vanadium battery is formally known as the vanadium redox battery.

A traditional battery, such as the familiar AA dry cell, holds electrolytes in its own sealed container. But the vanadium battery is a flow system—that is, liquid electrolytes are pumped from external tanks into the stack, where the electricity-generating redox reaction takes place. Want to store more power? Use bigger tanks. The bigger the tanks, the more energy-rich electrolytes they can store. The downside is that flow batteries tend to be big. It takes a flow battery the size of a refrigerator, incorporating a 160-gallon tank of electrolytes, to store 20,000 kilowatt-hours of electricity, enough to power a full-size HDTV for about three days. This is because the energy density in the liquid electrolytes is relatively low compared with that of the chemicals in lithium-ion batteries. (Energy density is a measure of the amount of energy that can be extracted from a given volume or mass of a battery.) For this reason, flow batteries are unlikely to be found in mobile applications, like laptops or electric cars. In those cases the battery of choice remains lithium-ion, which has an energy density five times that of vanadium.

For large-scale energy storage, the rules are very different. Typical rechargeable batteries are unsuitable because it is difficult to get a lot of energy out of them quickly; when the grid is on the verge of crashing, you want an energy infusion now. Ordinary rechargeables also wear out easily. A typical laptop battery will die after a few hundred charge-discharge cycles. In contrast, flow batteries can be charged and discharged many thousands of times.

A vanadium battery generates electricity in a stack, where electrolytes with different
oxidation states (indicated by the numbers) are allowed to react via a central membrane,
so that V(+5) becomes V(+4) and V(+2) becomes V(+3). Bigger tanks allow more electricity to be stored.


VRB Power Systems

The vanadium battery’s indefatigable nature echoes that of its creator, Skyllas-Kazacos, a single-minded researcher whose no-nonsense manner is frequently punctuated by an unexpected easy laugh. Her path to the vanadium battery began quite by accident in 1978 at Bell Laboratories in Murray Hill, New Jersey, where she was a member of the technical staff. She had applied to work on solar energy. At the time, Bell Labs was developing liquid-junction photovoltaics (a type of solar cell that employs liquid electrolytes), which seemed like a nice fit for her electrochemical training. But the director of the lab’s battery section picked up her job application first and liked what he saw. Much to her surprise, when Skyllas-Kazacos arrived she was assigned to do research on batteries, which she had never worked on before.

Her serendipitous experience in batteries was put to good use five years later after her return to Sydney, where she had grown up after immigrating with her family from Greece in 1954. She took a position at the University of New South Wales. A colleague there asked her to co-supervise a student who wanted to investigate ways of storing solar energy. The project sounded interesting, so she agreed.

Skyllas-Kazacos started her research by building on the foundational work on flow batteries done by NASA in the mid-1970s. The space agency’s scientists recognized that flow batteries could store solar power on a spacecraft, but they gave up on them after hitting a snag known as cross-contamination. When two liquid electrolytes made of different substances are separated by a membrane, sooner or later the membrane is permeated and the two substances mix, rendering the battery useless. The early NASA flow batteries, which used iron and chromium, quickly ran down as a result.

“We thought the way to solve this problem was to find an element that could be used on both sides,” Skyllas-Kazacos says. Technically, cross-contamination would still occur, but with essentially the same substance doing double duty, the problem would be moot. The key was to pick an element that could exist in a variety of electrical, or oxidation, states.

Skyllas-Kazacos chose vanadium, a soft, bright white, relatively abundant metal named for Vanadis, the Scandinavian goddess of beauty and youth. Vanadium has four oxidation states, known as V(+2), V(+3), V(+4), and V(+5); in each state the element carries a different amount of electric charge. Often oxidation states are hard to tell apart, but in this case nature was kind: V(+2) is purple, V(+3) green, V(+4) blue, and V(+5) yellow.

Simply having different oxidation states is not enough to make an element work for a liquid battery. The element has to be soluble, too. NASA had considered and rejected vanadium because the technical literature insisted that the solubility—and hence energy density—of the useful V(+5) form of the element was extremely low. Skyllas-Kazacos recognized, however, that just because something appears in print does not necessarily mean it is true. Previous studies had started by leaving a compound of vanadium, vanadium pentoxide, to dissolve in solution. This was a very slow process that could take days, and it never produced more than a tiny amount of V(+5) in solution. Skyllas-Kazacos approached the problem from a less direct route. “I started off with a highly soluble form, V(+4), then oxidized it up to produce a supersaturated solution of V(+5). I found that I could get much higher concentrations. From then on it became clear that the battery would actually work.”

In 1986 came a major milestone: Her university filed for a patent on the Skyllas-Kazacos vanadium battery. But proving the concept turned out to be the easy part. “We thought we would take the device to a certain level, and then some industry group would come and take it off our hands,” Skyllas-Kazacos says with her laugh. “What we didn’t realize was that the task was enormous. We had to develop the membranes, the conducting plastic for the electrodes, the structures, the materials, the designs, the control systems—everything!” In 1987 Agnew Clough, an Australian vanadium mining company, took out a license on the technology. But nothing came of the deal.

The vanadium battery finally got its first chance to shine in 1991, when Kashima-Kita Electric Power, a Mitsubishi subsidiary located north of Tokyo, took out a new license on the technology. Kashima-Kita powers its generators with Venezuelan pitch, a fuel rich in vanadium. Skyllas-Kazacos’s battery was a perfect fit. Here was a technology that allowed the company to recycle the vanadium from its soot and flatten out fluctuations in demand for its electricity at the same time. The world’s first large-scale vanadium battery went into operation in 1995, able to deliver 200 kilowatts for four hours—enough to power about 100 homes. It was a success, but Kashima-Kita sold the license and didn’t build another.

The buyer, Sumitomo Electric Industries, a giant Osaka-based company, had been working on NASA-style iron-chromium flow batteries since the early 1980s. Things looked up for Skyllas-Kazacos’s invention when Sumitomo switched to vanadium and licensed the technology in 1997. Three years later Sumitomo began selling vanadium batteries, including a 1.5-megawatt model that provides backup power to a Japanese liquid crystal display factory. By maintaining power during blackouts and thus preventing production losses, the battery reportedly paid for itself in six months.

Sumitomo sold a 1.5-megawatt battery that provides backup to a liquid crystal display factory. ?by maintaining power in blackouts and preventing production losses, it paid for itself in six months.

Sumitomo has since demonstrated vanadium technology in at least 15 other implementations, including a 170-kilowatt battery at a wind farm in Hokkaido. All are located in Japan, their development subsidized by the government. Sumitomo doesn’t sell outside Japan, possibly due to the battery’s high manufacturing cost.

One company is now taking up the vanadium banner worldwide: VRB Power Systems, a Vancouver, British Columbia, start-up that bought most of the early intellectual property rights to the technology. The company is targeting the market for hybrid systems used to power remote, off-grid telecom applications. “In places like Africa, cell phone towers are typically powered by little putt-putt diesel engines that run 24/7,” VRB CEO Tim Hennessy says. By adding a vanadium battery to the system, one can run the diesel generator while charging the battery, turn the diesel off, run the battery, then repeat the cycle nonstop. “The beauty of the battery is that you can cycle it as many times as you like,” Hennessy says. “The electrolyte doesn’t wear out.”

VRB has installed 5-kilowatt batteries at two sites in Kenya. Hennessy claims that these can produce “at least a 50 percent reduction in the burning of diesel fuel, plus the diesels will need less maintenance and last much longer. It promises to make a huge difference to our customers’ operating expenses.” The firm’s other recent sales include a 20-kilowatt system, worth $300,000, that will deliver nine hours of backup power for an undisclosed major telecom company in Sacramento, California. These customers are learning firsthand what Skyllas-Kazacos learned two decades ago. The vanadium battery really works. For all of vanadium’s promise, it still faces skeptics—including, surprisingly, some in the wind-power business who think the energy storage problem is not such a big deal. One big sticking point is price. Vanadium batteries currently cost about $500 per kilowatt-hour. So to run a city of 250,000 for 24 hours off a vanadium battery, the price tag would come to $2.4 billion. “Storage is not needed for wind, and it is unlikely to be cost effective in the next decade,” argues Rob Gramlich, policy director of the American Wind Energy Association. Gramlich points out that a recent U.S. Department of Energy report, “20% Wind Energy by 2030,” hardly mentions storage. He notes, too, that Denmark, the world’s most enthusiastic user of wind power, gets by without storage.

How do the Danes do it? The grid in western Denmark is strongly interconnected with those of Norway, Sweden, and Germany, which act as giant energy sponges for their neighbor. They sop up cheap surplus power from Denmark when the wind is blowing and return expensive hydroelectric power during peak periods. The result is that, although 17 percent of the electricity the Danes generate comes from wind, they use only 7 or 8 percent, according to Hugh Sharman of Incoteco, a Denmark-based energy consultancy and development company whose clients include VRB. The rest is exported.

That situation will not be sustainable if the countries add more renewable power—and the Danes propose building another 4.5 gigawatts’ worth of offshore wind farms. That leaves two ways of meeting electricity demand when the wind drops. Either build lots of small, fast-acting, fossil-fueled backup turbines, or go for storage. As the price of natural gas soars, battery storage is rapidly becoming a more economically appealing option. Researchers at the Riso National Laboratory for Sustainable Energy in Roskilde, Denmark, are currently evaluating a 15-kilowatt VRB battery.

Cost is not the only obstacle that the vanadium battery has to overcome. Reliability may also be an issue, following the shutdown last year of a vanadium battery showcase, a 200-kilowatt backup system that was installed in 2003 at a wind farm on King Island, off the northern coast of Tasmania. A problem with the plant’s battery (which was not supplied by VRB) caused the electrolyte to overheat, damaging the stack. Still, other demonstration vanadium batteries, such as a 250-kilowatt installation at Castle Rock, Utah, have been operating reliably for years.

One vote of confidence comes from China, Where?Large-scale energy storage systems ?are needed as backup during natural disasters ?such as the recent sichuan earthquake.

One vote of confidence comes from China. A group led by Huamin Zhang at the Dalian Institute of Chemical Physics in northern China has finished testing 2-, 5-, and 10-kilowatt vanadium battery modules and is currently evaluating a 100-kilowatt system. Vanadium “will have a potential market in China with the increasing development of renewable energy supported by the Chinese government,” Zhang wrote in an e-mail message. “Furthermore, large-scale energy storage systems are strongly needed in China [as backup during] frequent natural disasters” such as the recent Sichuan earthquake.

The greatest challenge to the vanadium battery may come from other advanced battery technologies, most seriously from sodium-sulfur batteries made by the Japanese ceramic specialist NGK Insulators. Though less scalable, sodium-sulfur has attracted investors because it is a more mature technology. Installations include the town of Rokkasho in northern Japan, where 34 megawatts of sodium-sulfur storage backs up 51 megawatts of wind turbines.

In the end, the vanadium battery has some uniquely appealing traits that may make it the best partner for renewable energy—not just for giant wind farms, but also for small-scale turbines and solar cells that bring renewable power directly into consumers’ homes. Currently, sodium-sulfur technology doesn’t work well at sizes below 1 megawatt. For smaller applications, such as regulating the flow of electricity from a house’s solar panels, vanadium-based systems look more cost-effective. They can be fit to more modest demands by using smaller tanks.

These smaller applications are where Skyllas-Kazacos is currently focusing her efforts. Three years ago she, along with her husband Michael and sons Nick and George, founded V-Fuel to develop and commercialize a second-generation vanadium battery. The impetus to found V-Fuel came when the University of New South Wales sold the rights to first-generation vanadium battery technology to VRB Power Systems. Two years later, with nothing left to develop, her battery lab—which at its height had 18 members—closed. Yet people kept contacting Skyllas-Kazacos about vanadium batteries, and she kept thinking up ideas for a better version. In 2005, at age 54, her husband wanted to retire. She told him, “No, you can’t—we’re starting again!”

“I could see so many opportunities,” Skyllas-Kazacos says, “but a lot of this interest wasn’t translating into real sales because the cost was just too expensive.” The key to cutting cost, she notes, is finding a replacement for the flow battery’s most expensive part, the membrane. Following a worldwide search for a suitable material, V-Fuel designed a polymer membrane that Skyllas-Kazacos claims is durable and less than half the price of conventional materials. A second challenge is making a smaller battery, one that does not need a warehouse to store electrolyte tanks. To do this, Skyllas-Kazacos has found an electrolyte that allows more vanadium to dissolve, thus doubling the energy storage density.

Atop a bench in V-Fuel’s cramped workshop in Sydney sits a prototype 5-kilowatt battery stack. The size of a filing-cabinet drawer, the stack is designed to be rack-mounted above a square block consisting of two electrolyte tanks. The resultant package would be compact enough to fit in a household closet. Configured as part of a home-based generation system, it could absorb power from rooftop solar panels and discharge electricity during peak periods. Skyllas-Kazacos estimates that such a consumer-use vanadium battery might eventually sell for around $5,000. At that price it could pay for itself in a few years.

So the vanadium battery may play a big role both invisibly at the electric utility and very visibly in the home, smoothing out Mother Nature’s rough edges so that renewable power works just as well as coal or natural gas. Stabilizing a future national grid that draws the majority of its power from renewable sources may seem like a tall order for a technology that delivers megawatts, not gigawatts, of power as it is used today, but some industry insiders are confident batteries can rise to the challenge. “At this point, [a 1.2-megawatt battery] is fairly large-scale, but we are at the front end of this curve,” Jim Kelly of Southern California Edison says. “Five years from now that will seem so trivial. It’s like comparing the first personal computer you had with the ones we have today. You look back and laugh. I think we’ll see that same thing happen with the battery industry. We are taking baby steps, in part because the industry is not mature, the technology winners have not been determined, and the costs are still high. But these are all the things you expect as a revolution happens.”

Tuesday, September 30, 2008

Algae Ethanol Protocol

My posting on the use of thermophilic algae to directly produce ethanol brought this comment from Prof. Hans-Jurgen Franke about work recently done by Pengchen Fu in Hawai’i.

I have no doubt that we will be seeing many initiatives aimed at maximizing the use of various forms of algae to produce the forms of transportation fuel that we certainly need. I will try to keep up with them as much as possible. Without question, the comparative advantage of algae over any form of field crop appears obvious. Using them to convert agricultural waste and any other organic waste seems to be simply good husbandry.

What I find most encouraging is that I am seeing this happening so fast. We can expect, since we cannot see every project out there, that we will have dozens of pilot operations in play over the next two years. Thus a best practice protocol can be settled on within five years at most assuring a smooth replacement of hydrocarbons in the fuel chain.

In many ways, this will be a historic global transformation of the energy equation. Oil markets have provided the necessary price signal that the age of oil has ended and that we must look elsewhere for transportation fuel. This algae revolution will leave trillions of barrels of expensive oil in the ground were they truly belong.

The rollout of very cheap nanosolar as well as the advent of working Vanadium battery storage secures static power at the same time. Amazingly, this can all become main stream over the next five years. The manufacturing aspects are completely doable and in many cases straight of the shelf.


New comment on Thermophilic Algae converts Agri-waste to Ethanol.

Saturday, September 27, 2008 6:38 PM

Prof.Hans-Jürgen Franke has left a new comment on your post "Thermophilic Algae converts Agri-waste to Ethanol":

ETHANOL-PRODUCTION WITH BLUE-GREEN-ALGAE

PROPOSAL FOR AN ALTERNATIVE FUEL AFTER THE OIL-CRASH

University of Hawai'i Professor Pengchen "Patrick" Fu developed an innovative technology, to produce high amounts of ethanol with modified cyanobacterias, as a new feedstock for ethanol, without entering in conflict with the food and feed-production .

Fu has developed strains of cyanobacteria — one of the components of pond scum — that feed on atmospheric carbon dioxide, and produce ethanol as a waste product.

He has done it both in his laboratory under fluorescent light and with sunlight on the roof of his building. Sunlight works better, he said.

It has a lot of appeal and potential. Turning waste into something useful is a good thing. And the blue-green-algae needs only sun and wast- recycled from the sugar-cane-industry, to grow and to produce directly more and more ethanol. With this solution, the sugarcane-based ethanol-industry in Brazil and other tropical regions will get a second way, to produce more biocombustibles for the world market.

The technique may need adjusting to increase how much ethanol it yields, but it may be a new technology-challenge in the near future.

The process was patented by Fu and UH in January, but there's still plenty of work to do to bring it to a commercial level. The team of Fu founded just the start-up LA WAHIE BIOTECH INC. with headquarter in Hawaii and branch-office in Brazil.

PLAN FOR AN EXPERIMENTAL ETHANOL PLANT

Fu figures his team is two to three years from being able to build a full-scaleethanol plant, and they are looking for investors or industry-partners (joint venture).He is fine-tuning his research to find different strains of blue-green algae that will produce even more ethanol, and that are more tolerant of high levels of ethanol. The system permits, to "harvest" continuously ethanol – using a membrane-system- and to pump than the blue-green-algae-solution in the Photo-Bio-Reactor again.

Fu started out in chemical engineering, and then began the study of biology. He has studied in China, Australia, Japan and the United States, and came to UH in 2002 after a stint as scientist for a private company in California.

He is working also with NASA on the potential of cyanobacteria in future lunar and Mars colonization, and is also proceeding to take his ethanol technology into the marketplace. A business plan using his system, under the name La Wahie Biotech, won third place — and a $5,000 award — in the Business Plan Competition at UH's Shidler College of Business. Daniel Dean and Donavan Kealoha, both UH law and business students, are Fu's partners. So they are in the process of turning the business plan into an operating business.The production of ethanol for fuel is one of the nation's and the world's major initiatives, partly because its production takes as much carbon out of the atmosphere as it dumps into the atmosphere. That's different from fossil fuels such as oil and coal, which take stored carbon out of the ground and release it into the atmosphere, for a net increase in greenhouse gas.

Most current and planned ethanol production methods depend on farming, and in the case of corn and sugar, take food crops and divert them into energy.

Fu said crop-based ethanol production is slow and resource-costly. He decided to work with cyanobacteria, some of which convert sunlight and carbon dioxide into their own food and release oxygen as a waste product.

Other scientists also are researching using cyanobacteria to make ethanol, using different strains, but Fu's technique is unique, he said. He inserted genetic material into one type of freshwater cyanobacterium, causing it to produce ethanol as its waste product. It works, and is an amazingly efficient system.

The technology is fairly simple. It involves a photobioreactor, which is afancy term for a clear glass or plastic container full of something alive, in which light promotes a biological reaction. Carbon dioxide gas is bubbled through the green mixture of water and cyanobacteria. The liquid is then passed through a specialized membrane that removes the ethanol, allowing the water, nutrients and cyanobacteria to return to thephotobioreactor.Solar energy drives the conversion of the carbon dioxide into ethanol. The partner of Prof. Fu in Brazil in the branch-office of La Wahie Biotech Inc. in Aracaju - Prof. Hans-Jürgen Franke - is developing a low-cost photo-bio-reactor-system. Prof. Franke want´s soon creat a pilot-project with Prof. Fu in Brazil.

The benefit over other techniques of producing ethanol is that this is simple and quick—taking days rather than the months required to grow crops that can be converted to ethanol.La Wahie Biotech Inc. believes it can be done for significantly less than the cost of gasoline and also less than the cost of ethanol produced through conventional methods.Also, this system is not a net producer of carbon dioxide: Carbon dioxide released into the environment when ethanol is burned has been withdrawn from the environment during ethanol production. To get the carbon dioxide it needs, the system could even pull the gas out of the emissions of power plants or other carbon dioxide producers. That would prevent carbon dioxide release into the atmosphere, where it has been implicated as a major cause of global warming.

Honolulo – Hawaii/USA and Aracaju – Sergipe/Brasil - 15/09/2008

Prof. Pengcheng Fu – E-Mail:
pengchen2008@gmail.com

Prof. Hans-Jürgen Franke – E-Mail: lawahiebiotech.brasil@gmail.com
Telefon: 00-55-79-3243-2209

Flirting With Depression

It is hard to believe that the financial system has come to this pass. Can you pay the balance of your mortgage tomorrow? That is what Congress is asking us indirectly to do.

The money has been lost and the banks do not have the assets to cover the losses because high risk loans were allowed to climb from a normal 8% of asset class to 22%. The money has been spent and is out there in the economy were the banks cannot get it. Therefore they have to contract their loan portfolio at the very least or as is happening, go out of business and abandon the bad loans to the government and on directly to us. Certainly the loan portfolios are already shrinking.

The bailout voted down on Monday was no more than getting ahead of the disaster and releasing the banks from the need to call billions of dollars in good loans. The banks will now need to call these loans and this will forcibly shrink the American economy. This is famously called deflation.

If it runs its course, millions will be thrown out of work and that will include government employees.

I am already seeing the first whiffs of heat coming from Main Street. And the fear now been induced will accelerate the effect. The banks are all hunkering down trying to see if they are still in business.

Right now no one seems to know how to sell a solution and I suspect no one there knows quite what a solution looks like.

I know that my suggestion to mark to market the housing market and securitizing the losses by sharing in the equity would clean up the housing sector for almost all participants. What bothers me is what I do not know and what everyone else does not know about the degree of leveraging off balance sheet.

That is the game that wiped out the Japanese system at the beginning of the nineties. It also caused the great depression.

I also think that it is high time that we removed the legal profession completely from the task of creating financial products and their regulation. The accounting profession is much better suited for this task by temperament, whereas lawyers are trained to think in terms of gaming the system without heeding the consequences. We are now harvesting the consequences.

Of course this will never happen.

Been the eternal optimist I hope that they can get over all this. A mark to market on housing would actually give the economy a nice bounce that would coincide with dropping commodity prices and energy replacement swiftly reinvigorating the economy.

We actually stand on the threshold of one of great economic transformations in human history that will completely change our way of life forever. The real challenge should be to make it better than to cause it to be delayed a single day.

Monday, September 29, 2008

Bronze Sword Manufacture

I plucked this copy from the site of a craftsman who is making Bronze Age swords using the methods as best reconstructed. We learn something very important. It is that Bronze swords are and were superior to Iron Age swords for a thousand years or so. There was no good reason to switch except in terms of availability.

That means that a long accepted idea that the transition represented technical progress is rubbish. It represented nothing of the kind. What the transition represented was a dramatic loss of supply of top quality copper.

As I have already posted, the primary supply came by the end of the Bronze Age from the native copper mines of Lake Superior. Ample evidence supports mining activity there coincident with the thousand year history of the European Bronze Age that removed at least 5,000,000 pounds of copper. That suggests that the shipping rate toward the end perhaps approached several tons per year. That is volume that is completely believable for the time.

That it then reached Atlantis at the Straits of Gibraltar and was there alloyed with tin from Britain and forged into trade goods is mere mercantile sense. This also meant that all the shipping and skilled artisans concentrated there making it all completely vulnerable to the Hekla Tsunami in 1159 BCE. Not only the head but the arms and legs of this Bronze Age civilization was cleanly wiped out and unable to start over.

The copper supply from Lake Superior was unique inasmuch as it was in the form of native copper without the problem of sulphides and their related metals. It was also in the form of high grade ores which is unusual for copper. A typical grade would be around a hundred pounds to the ton. A good sulphide ore is usually around twenty pounds to the ton and includes iron and other base metals.

My conjecture is that the copper route was up the Hudson River to the Mohawk River and then transitioning over to the east end of Lake Ontario into the portage route through the Canadian Shield to Georgian Bay on Lake Huron. Archeological sites follow this route and include so called controversial sites in the Hudson Valley and a major site at Peterborough in Ontario.

Several tons of copper is well within the haulage capacity of a canoe based transport system.

The rest of the route would be directly to Isle de Royal in Lake Superior which was one of the major Bronze Age mining locales with hundreds of mining pits. I discuss this more extensively in my manuscript Paradigms Shift. I obviously need to add an addendum on the crucial role of the not so legendary Atlantis.

The original difficulty that everyone had with Plato’s tale of Atlantis was that no one could understand a reason for such a civilization to even exist. Egypt and Mesopotamia is obvious. The agricultural surpluses of the Atlantic coast were surely minimal and founded on cattle culture. This was not conducive to the building of Bronze Age cities.

That objection is clearly moot and Rainer Kuhne has shown us the actual location of the city itself. Once excavated, we will surely find plenty of evidence of the Bronze trade.









http://www.bronze-age-craft.com/swords_for_sale.htm

Apart from the design, the three qualities that you would look for in a bronze sword are, weight, balance and alloy, the level of skill Bronze age sword makers achieved with clay casting technology is stunning, and the fact that no one can match them today, is even more humbling.

WeightBronze swords rarely exceeded 800 grams, if it is over 1 kilo it is way to heavy "(it's a lemon"). Due to the difficulty of casting swords in sand, most foundries will cast on the heavy side, and although the end results would look good in a glass case, they bare no comparison to a genuine Bronze Age weapon.

BalanceIt is interesting that if you were to look at the balance point on bronze age swords, its much nearer the handle than you would expect, the blades taper evenly toward the point, and are not end heavy.

AlloyThe alloys used in the bronze age for swords, on average, vary from 8% to 12% tin and in later swords the lead content varies 1% to 5% depending on the tin content. My personal feelings are that the hardness of sword alloys could not exceed the hardness of the tools used in the process of edge hardening.All bronze age sword edges were hardened and sharpened at the same time, the edges were forged down to a thin, hard wafer. The work is so neat, its not easy to understand how they achieved it.

Over the past couple of years I have had some interesting interactions with archaeologists researching bronze swords. Subsequently I have come to the conclusion that we only see bronze swords in drawings in one dimension, and have little understanding of their weight, balance and how they were used.The first thing we would all say, when a bronze age sword was paced in are hands is, "it's so small", and they were small! It is only by the end of the bronze age that swords were getting any thing like the size we imagine, so 67cm would be a very big sword, and would probably weigh around 700 grams.

"What’s so good about, my swords?"

I hear you ask. I cast my swords vertically in very hot stone moulds. This means I can cast swords at the right weight, it also means I get a better structure to the bronze. As the casting method is nearer the bronze age method, I use a 12% tin/copper alloy which is at the top end for tin content for a bronze age sword. This casts well and gives a nice stiff blade. I mix all my own alloys and never use soft silicon bronzes.

Hardened Edges

One of the most beautiful things about the bronze age swords are the recasso edges, which are forged in. All my swords come with hardened edges, done in the (forged in) bronze age method. The forging is quite time consuming and I believe I am the only person able to do this at the moment. I cast all my blade as near to a sensible weight for bronze age sword as possible, and tuning a mould might take me many days and up to nine castings until I am happy.

In recent television programme for the BBC, one of my bronze swords was repeatedly stuck against a reproduction of an early iron sword, in a test to show the advantages of iron over bronze. Even though both myself and
Hector Cole (the iron sword maker) had advised the programme makers the that the bronze sword would do better than expected, they were very surprised. The bronze sword was more than a match for the iron, both blades received heavy damage. The ability of bronze to rapidly work harden under impact, and the lack of carbon in early iron swords must have created a bit of a technological stand off around 700bc. At this time the art of the bronze caster was at its height and iron working was in its infancy.

In my work as a bronze sword maker i try to catch the essence of sword making in the bronze age and get as close as possible to the originals.

Friday, September 26, 2008

Mediterranean Upheaval after 1159 BCE

Something that I was not aware of is that the cataclysm of 1159 BCE focused on Hekla was apparently contemporaneous with destructive earthquakes throughout the Mediterranean basin. If they all happened on the same day, then we are talking about an extraordinary event in world history that is scary.

That they happened close in time is quite apparent, but the lack of recognition of this in the written records of Egypt suggests instead that they happened over a somewhat longer time period. It seems likely though that the initial event was the Hekla event itself, possibly triggered by an event associated with the Mid Atlantic ridge itself. It seems reasonable that a major displacement would have shaken the Mediterranean Basin causing major after shocks for years to come.

This also handily explains the sequential demise of the Sea People maritime culture probably based in Atlantis by Gibraltar as previously posted. The Mycenaean culture was a likely tributary culture paying tribute and relying on Atlantean support for trade and military backup. Once this ended in 1159 BCE, the raison d’être of the palace cultures of Mycenae ended, forcing the abandonment of these structures.

It is reasonable to presume such fortresses existed throughout the Mediterranean but were likely much more modest in most cases. These were trade stations that justified their presence by trade to the local population. Remember that the currency of the Atlantean culture was bronze and that this needed central distribution and far flung shipping. A little bit like the British empire of later days.

In any event, the archeological record shows that major quakes ravaged Anatolia and the Levantine Coast and a lot more besides. It is as if every likely fault let go and knocked down the adjacent cities.

This does not mean that civilization ended however, although the disruption certainly created security problems and let lose barbarian tribes and the like. It is just that our own experience informs us that the survivors can rebuild completely inside of a generation while completely replacing human loses.

What was lost was the maritime sea empire that supplied huge amounts of bronze into this market. Atlantis itself was not rebuilt and its population base on the Atlantic coast was decimated by a collapse of the harvest thanks to Hekla. This is all shown in the tree ring evidence.

Thereafter, the Iron Age emerged in Anatolia under the Hittites and was likely accelerated by this event. Iron had been worked long before this but had not become common place at all.

Once iron took over from bronze as the metal of choice, there existed a huge surplus of bronze in the various state coffers which likely took centuries to dissipate. If you do not believe me, a reading of the building of Solomon’s temple will make the point.

Thursday, September 25, 2008

Phillipine Terra Preta

This is a good field report on terra preta experimentation in the Philippines. This should be useful to many others trying the same thing.

My only comment is that I suspect rice paddy culture is a poor candidate because the paddies are nutrient sinks to begin with, or at the least should be.

I would like to see this work focus on depleted soils and implement a seed hill planting system to increase efficiency. He mentions the growing of corn, so the three sisters is possible here. I think that the three sisters will maximize performance and encourage adoption.

The three sisters is of course the combination of corn, beans and pumpkin in a seed hill carrying all the applied nutrients and manure.

My Projects in the Philippines by Jochen Binikowski

Terra Preta / Biochar Experiments

Making charcoal from rice husk

My name is Jochen Binikowski, from Hamburg, Germany. I am the consignee of Tigaon Handicraft, a small, family owned and run, handicraft business, based in Tigaon, Camarines Sur, Philippines, which is owned and managed by the family of my Filipina wife. Since 1980 I have regularly visited the Philippines.

As a sideline we have been conducting some trials in the local agricultural sector. Since February 2007 we have been experimenting with rice husk charcoal, with a view to improving local soils (Terra Preta) and the production of briquettes. The most common cooking fuels in Tigaon (42.000 inhabitants) are firewood, charcoal and liquified gas. The huge consumption of firewood and charcoal has resulted in the dramatic deforestration of the local rainforest at nearby Mt. Isarog. In the event that we are successful, these problems could become significantly reduced and hence, we are very willing to share our experience with others.

We are exclusively using agricultural waste as our raw material (biomass stream). So far we have experimented with rice husk, corn cobs, corn stems, coconut shells and waste wood from local carpenters. In order to dispose of this �waste�, these materials are typically burnt by local farmers.

Since January 2008 I am back in the Philippines. My brother in law, Elmer L. Orfanel is working with me on these experiments. He is an engineer and very creative in designing new equipment. In the meantime we are testing already our semi-commercial briquette press and charcoal production in drums, the kiln method. Both tests are very promissing so far.

Our current , most pressing priorities are the construction of a permanent site for pyrolysis. It will be designed in a way to accomodate a truckload of rice husks. The rice mills are happy to supply us free of charge because as of now they just dump it at remote places. We do have a feasible site where water, storage places, electricity etc. are abundant and which is far away from residents who might become affected from smoke. At this location we will also operate the briquette press and drying room. This will minimize the cost of transportation. At present our main problem is the lack of capital.

In commercial quantities we can use the process heat i.e. for a rice drier. This would solve another big problem that the smaller farmers suffer from, which is the post harvest losses due to a lack of drying equipment during rainy season. So far we have been using corn starch as our binding material. Provided the briquettes are completely dry they are getting very hard and are easy to store. They must be wrapped in paper to avoid absorption of air humidity. We do hope to reduce our drying time through higher pressure levels produced by the new briquette press. This is an important factor with regards to feasibility.

In order to become feasible the briquetts must compete with the existing fuel prices in Tigaon, 1 US$ = approx. 42 Peso

  • Firewood dried = 3 Peso/KG
  • Charcoal regular = 8 Peso/KG
  • Charcoal from coconut shells = 10 Peso/KG
  • 11 KG Gas bottle 660 Peso
  • Kerosin/Diesel 38 Peso/Liter
  • Electricity about 10 Peso/KWH (Industrial consumption)
  • Electricity about 14 Peso/KWH (Household consumption)

There are huge seasonal differences in the prices of firewood and charcoal. During the dry season (January to June) the market prices are much lower as opposed to the rainy season (July to December). The daily wages are very low: assistant 120 Peso, qualified worker 250 Peso, engineer 400 Peso.

The materials already tested yielded different heating values. So far the best was corn cobs, coconut shell, coconut trunks, bamboo and corn stems. The heating value was even higher than that of traditional charcoal. Rice husks had a much lower heating value due to the high silica (SiO2) content of more than 50%. But the rice husks are required as a filler material during pyrolysis anyway and moreover can be used for soil improvement (Terra Preta). We also did some experiments attempting to separate the SiO2 from the carbon, but so far without any success.

Some of the experiments were carried out just a short time before my departure back to Germany in June 2007. As such we have not yet acquired the proper heating test results for these materials integrated into the graph below.

In February 2007 we prepared 5 adjucent rice paddys at 4x5 meter size:

  1. Traditional planting 100% fertilizer
  2. 1 KG/sqm charcoal, 100% fertilizer
  3. 1 KG/sqm charcoal, 50% fertilizer
  4. 1 KG/sqm charcoal, no fertilizer
  5. 1 KG/sqm charcoal, 1 KG/sqm old compost, no fertilizer

Harvest gross weight of each paddy:

  1. 13,750 KG
  2. 14,175 KG
  3. 11,550 KG
  4. 10,475 KG
  5. 10,550 KG

According to these figures the positive effect of charcoal was just minimal and does not justify the additional expenses for production and distribution on the fields. After the harvest, the paddies were treated again in the same way with charcoal and rice was planted. But unfortunately this harvest was partly damaged by heavy rains and no proper result could be computed.

On April 7, 2008 we started a new rice experiment. Now we are using a special mixure of soil bacterias, complete fertilizer and charcoal for a seedbed starter. The Philippine Government is propagating a simmelar technique to the rice and corn farmers:

BIO-N Fertilizer

The BIO-N is also used in our control seedbeds. We expect initial results by end of April. After transplanting the seedlings the seedbeds will be used as an experimental field for potatoe planting. If this will work it could be a profitable alternative to rice planting during rainy season and it could reduced the emission of the greenhouse gas methane.

Vegetable planting experiments with charcoal enriched soil

In 2006 and 2007 we tried to plant several vegetable species in fields which where prepared using compost and charcoal. We had very confusing results: What was growing well in 2006, suffered drastically in 2007 and vice versa.

In 2008 we experienced big problems with our vegetable seeds. Most of them did not germinate. The lesson is not to store seeds for too long time... Actually we are just experimenting with different typs of lettuce in terra preta soil and it looks good so far.

We are still puzzled by the possible reasons as conditions were replicated to the best of our ability (ie. the same seeds, soil, season, climate conditions etc). At present I am preparing for a new trial. The target is to develop a method to minimize some of the common problems in vegetable farming:

  • Draught and flooding
  • Attacks by soil insects
  • Damages by fungi
  • Different soil conditions
  • Damages by Typhoones

Since we have an abundance of different raw materials , i.e. charcoal, compost, animal waste, seaweeds, lahar (volcanic stones and ashes) etc. what we can experiment with is different soil mixtures. This means the experiments can be reproduced at any location in the tropics. Empty cans, cut plastic bottles, plastic bags, rice bags and disposable plastic cups can be used as containers or pots.

Another target is to harvest out of season when prices are high. Since the pots are portable they can be temporarily transferred to safe places in case of typhoon warnings. We tried this successfully with a few tomato plants in 2006.