It actually not as ineffiecient as it seems, Methan and Methanol can be produced by direct air capturing with an efficiency of about 50 %
The only sensible zero-carbon "gasoline" would be pure bio-ethanol. Is already used in Brazil.Since there are projects attempting to produce zero-carbon petrol (diesel too?) by Porsche at least, I wonder what octane/PN rating would such petrol have?
If you are going to make ethanol from either fermented sugars or cellulose, a better fuel is butanol. This 4 carbon alcohol has higher energy density, high Performance Number (100+), runs at similar fuel air ratios as gasoline, and doesn’t mix with water like ethanol.The only sensible zero-carbon "gasoline" would be pure bio-ethanol. Is already used in Brazil.Since there are projects attempting to produce zero-carbon petrol (diesel too?) by Porsche at least, I wonder what octane/PN rating would such petrol have?
Octane number is above 120.
At the moment ethanol can only be produced by fermentation of sugars. There is research already going on to also ferment cellulose into ethanol. That would be an enormous boost for bio-ethanol production.
Capturing CO2 from the atmosphere and react it with H2 (hydrogen) to produce hydrocarbon fuel is total BS, no matter what some "professor" from some "university" claims. It's merely subsidized hobbyism.
The ABE fermentation has a long history (making cordite a century or more ago with the acetone and the butanol was essentially a byproduct)If you are going to make ethanol from either fermented sugars or cellulose, a better fuel is butanol. This 4 carbon alcohol has higher energy density, high Performance Number (100+), runs at similar fuel air ratios as gasoline, and doesn’t mix with water like ethanol.The only sensible zero-carbon "gasoline" would be pure bio-ethanol. Is already used in Brazil.Since there are projects attempting to produce zero-carbon petrol (diesel too?) by Porsche at least, I wonder what octane/PN rating would such petrol have?
Octane number is above 120.
At the moment ethanol can only be produced by fermentation of sugars. There is research already going on to also ferment cellulose into ethanol. That would be an enormous boost for bio-ethanol production.
Capturing CO2 from the atmosphere and react it with H2 (hydrogen) to produce hydrocarbon fuel is total BS, no matter what some "professor" from some "university" claims. It's merely subsidized hobbyism.
There are challenges to be overcome to ferment butanol from sugars but a lot of research has been done to get similar conversion efficiencies as ethanol fermentations. And cellulose fermentation has the same challenges for both.
Electric does not have the range. A Tesla can go about 400 miles on a charge with the highest tier battery. Then it needs to recharge for several hours. My full size, 4x4, V-8 powered pickup can go 430 miles on a tank and refuels in 5 mins from anywhere, including a jerry can. My range doesn't drop when I need heat since heat is a waste product in an IC engine. There are multiple real world reasons why battery powered vehicles don't work en mass. The previously mentioned usability, the complete lack of electric generation capability to power them, the lack of power transmission to get the power to them and the huge fire danger. A gas or diesel vehicle burns hot for a few mins. A lithium vehicle burns hot for hours and a warehouse full of the stuff burns for DAYS to WEEKS.Electric already has the range. Those who hold oil stocks are desperate to see prices go up. In the meantime, the oil industry will continue since a great deal of money has to be shifted from oil to alternatives. It appears all of that has been planned out.
Yeah, they are. I'm not trying to imply they are not. But lithium burns far, far longer. There was a warehouse fire in Chicago last summer. Took a week to bring it under control. I think they were still cooling it down after 2 weeks.Exploding gas tanks are really messy. Exploding gas tankers...
They do. But the infrastructure to recharge millions of them at the same time just isn't there.For the daily commute and shopping, BEVs have enough range.
Not really. Let's assume you live in a small community of a hundred or so homes. You all go to work and come home in a roughly 2 hour time period. Plug your cars in to charge, now your hundred homes are pulling down megawatts of power. Now multiply that by thousands of other communities. The grid is built on an assumption of a relatively stable load.It depends on where you live.
Don't get me started on the absurdity of those two power sources. Staying with our electric car example, you CAN'T charge a car overnight with solar...The grid needs to be upgraded anyway for decentralised power generation. Wind turbines. Solar power.