Difference between revisions of "Alternative Power"

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* http://www.gnu.org/software/gnuae/manual/basics.html
 
* http://www.gnu.org/software/gnuae/manual/basics.html
 
* http://abcnews.go.com/blogs/technology/2013/06/chemist-hopes-artificial-leaf-can-power-civilization-using-photosynthesis/
 
* http://abcnews.go.com/blogs/technology/2013/06/chemist-hopes-artificial-leaf-can-power-civilization-using-photosynthesis/
 
+
*  The process plants carry out to sustain themselves can be modeled as a system humans can mimic as well. While the carbohydrates produced by plants through photosynthesis does not apply to our energy needs, this process can be modified to produce hydrogen. Artificial photosynthesis mimics an extremely efficient process that bacteria, algae, and plants use to produce renewable energy resources.
 
== Getting closer ==
 
== Getting closer ==
 
* Designing a fictional history in which an artist is contracted to redesign an electrical company. the artwork is the redesign of the organisation which will design the next electrical company and generator product. but i dont want to think of a decentralised solution. it needs to be mass production, scalable.
 
* Designing a fictional history in which an artist is contracted to redesign an electrical company. the artwork is the redesign of the organisation which will design the next electrical company and generator product. but i dont want to think of a decentralised solution. it needs to be mass production, scalable.

Revision as of 12:26, 25 November 2013

Initial Ideas

Getting closer

Stirling Engine

Thermoelectric

  • Forum for the Future’s Head of Built Environment, Martin Hunt, notes that “Geothermal technologies have been around for a long time and are commercially viable. It looks like this application of heat recapture technology will only make sense in busy public spaces, but if the numbers stack up I can see it could be used on a wider scale.”
  • http://www.bekkoame.ne.jp/~khirata/academic/kiriki/begin/history.html

History of Thermoelectrics