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04-15-2002, 02:02 PM | #1 |
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Potentially extremely cool energy source....
<a href="http://www.canada.com/vancouver/vancouversun/story.asp?id=%7B1F54AEED-A34B-411B-B95F-972AB119DD85%7D" target="_blank">New source of hydrogen.</a>
Now if we can just make it easy to extract. [Edited because posting the link itself was just fugly. ] [ April 15, 2002: Message edited by: Corwin ]</p> |
04-15-2002, 02:23 PM | #2 |
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Fairly obviously, this could help in the potential switch to cleaner fuels if this pans out.
The problem is we still need to convince companies to invest in this before we run out of conventional fuel. It will not be easy, especially since when the fossil fuel supplies dwindle, it will be worth even more. |
04-15-2002, 02:34 PM | #3 | |
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From Corwin's link:
Quote:
A second career for me - no more of that stinky-assed crude oil - it's HYDROGEN NOW! Edited to add: Bunda, I just caught your post. The technology might be a whole lot like current natural gas extraction - it's pretty strange for us oilys to think about drilling 30,000-foot wells in Iowa, though. [ April 15, 2002: Message edited by: Coragyps ]</p> |
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04-15-2002, 02:47 PM | #4 |
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Well it's pretty obvious from the description where the hydrogen is coming from. Water forced down into the crust gets exposed to huge amounts of pressure and heat. That's basically what hydrogen reformers do.
I'm still wondering how granite can store this. I mean I know that Platinum family metals, (Palladium, Platinum, Titanium and Nickel) are all highly porous to hydrogen.... but I can't find any references to any of these elements in either granite or olivine. |
04-15-2002, 03:01 PM | #5 |
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Iron, in the +2 state, is the reducing agent that "cracks" the water in this case. I can't remember the exact details. The storage in the Kansas well was in fractures in sedimentary rock near olivine, IIRC. The tough part of exploiting hydrogen would likely be finding enough porosity or fractures near the H2 source to ever accumulate enough to produce.
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04-15-2002, 03:05 PM | #6 |
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But it would seem to me that if the rock is porous enough to hydrogen, then all we'd have to do is drill a hole down about 2 miles, and let the pressure do the work for us. Let it seep through the rock itself. If it's porous enough to hydrogen to store it, shouldn't it also be porous enough to let it out?
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04-15-2002, 06:27 PM | #7 | |
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I'm all for looking for hydrogen - but it won't displace fossil fuels until it's 1) cheaper or 2) we start truly choking ourselves to death on all the carbon dioxide we make from fossils. Of course option 2) might be sooner than we think. |
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04-15-2002, 09:31 PM | #8 |
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But let's remember.... methane is a much more complex molecule than free hydrogen is. Part of the reason we have so much trouble storing hydrogen is that it seeps between the molecules of whatever container it's in.
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