Monday, March 15, 2010

Flexible Nanocrystal Fibers Can Harness Tidbits of Waste Energy to Create Hydrogen Fuel

Source: http://www.popsci.com/technology/article/2010-03/flexible-nanocrystal-fibers-harness-waste-energy-create-hydrogen-fuel

Piezoelectric materials that create energy when flexed might go beyond recharging our smart phones and help make hydrogen fuel. Scientists have harnessed piezoelectric energy from nanocrystal fibers to split water into oxygen and hydrogen gas.

"This is a new phenomenon, converting mechanical energy directly to chemical energy," said Huifang Xu, a geologist at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. He and his colleagues have dubbed it the piezoelectrochemical (PZEC) effect.

The usual brittle nature of crystals such as zinc oxide and barium titanate gives way to more flexible fibers at tiny scales. The Wisconsin researchers found that the tiny nanocrystal fibers can scavenge energy based on small mechanical "noise" such as vibrations or flowing water.

The chemical energy of hydrogen fuel also represents a more stable method of storage than an electric charge, Xu explained.

This represents perhaps another small (hah!) step toward squeezing energy from many tiny sources. People have harnessed mechanical energy for centuries on the large scale by using waterwheels and dams, but even raindrops should theoretically work in this case.

Perhaps the bigger question mark still hangs over the viability of a hydrogen economy. Other research teams have investigated ways of producing hydrogen through artificial leaves, as well as storing hydrogen within new types of solids. But even with hydrogen fuel-cell cars hitting the road, the supporting hydrogen infrastructure such as refueling stations remains in its infancy.

[via ScienceDaily]

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As China and US Plan to Exploit "Burning Ice" for Fuel, the Ice Race Is On

Source: http://www.popsci.com/science/article/2010-03/china-and-us-race-burning-ice-fuel

Methane hydrate crystals show promise as a clean energy source

When methane and freezing cold water fuse under tremendous pressure, they create a substance as paradoxical as it coveted: burning ice. Earlier in the year, a report from the National Research Council identified the combustible water, also known as methane hydrate, as a potential source of natural gas. Now, according to the Chinese news organization Xinhau, China is joining the US, Japan, and South Korea in the hunt for this weird mineral.

As explained in this comic, there's 85.4 trillion cubic feet of methane hydrate buried under Alaska. That's equivalent to 3 billion tons of oil, or enough to heat 100 million American homes for a decade. According to the Xinahu article, reserves of methane hydrate in China's Qinghai province are equal to 35 billion tons of oil, enough to supply China for 90 years.

Unfortunately, China lacks the capability to excavate the mineral. Even at an expedited pace, China's Ministry of Land and Resources estimates it could be 10 to 15 years before any hydrate-derived gas finds its way into Chinese homes.

[Discovery News]

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"Get YouTube" Bookmarklet Grabs YouTube Videos in One Click [YouTube]

Source: http://lifehacker.com/5493662/get-youtube-bookmarklet-grabs-youtube-videos-in-one-click

You'll find no shortage of browser add-ons and specialty sites to help you grab clips off YouTube, but they all lack for the simplicity of a single-click bookmarklet.

Over at the technology site How-To Geek they've put together Get YouTube, a bookmarklet that enhances your YouTube experience by placing a simple download link in the sidebar of YouTube. It doesn't have any bells or whistles, you won't find any options for selecting formats or such, it just lets you download the video you are currently watching at the quality and size you're watching it at.

You don't need to install any add-ons, install Greasemonkey, or visit any specialty sites. Visit How-To Geek at the link below, drag the bookmarklet to your bookmark toolbar, and grab any YouTube video that catches your fancy. Have a favorite tool for capturing streaming media? Let's hear about it in the comments.

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Librophile Makes Quick Work of Finding Free Audio and Ebooks [Books]

Source: http://lifehacker.com/5493850/librophile-makes-quick-work-of-finding-free-audio-and-ebooks

There are loads of free audio and e-books available online for the taking, but tracking them down across their many sources can be tough. Web-based seach tool Librophile makes the job a lot easier.

If you're not sure what books you're looking for, just page through the listings. Each book entry includes the option to open a pop-up window to play an excerpt, opens the e-book in a new browser window, download the file in ZIP format, or subscribe to an audio book in iTunes. Hovering your mouse over the book title pops up a summary of what the story is about.

Librophile also lets users search by keyword or book title, or through categories like Popular or Genre. One particularly great feature of this free web site is how easy it is to listen to audio books right in the browser without installing a bunch of software. It's a definite plus for visually impaired users, or kids who won't sit still long enough to read the classics in dead-tree form.

Have a favorite tool for finding free books on the web? Let us know in the comments.

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Le Whif Coffee Inhaler: First Hit's Free $3 [Addicts]

Source: http://gizmodo.com/5493588/le-whif-coffee-inhaler-first-hits-free-3

The makers of the Chocolate Inhaler have done themselves one better. The Le Whif Coffee Inhaler, a lipstick-sized tube that contains a "breathable coffee powder," gives you a nice caffeine fix without all that drinking and swallowing messiness. How nice?

Oh, just 100mg of caffeine. To give you some perspective, that's somewhere between a cup of instant and a double espresso, just from one little puff off a biodegradable tube. To give you overwhelming perspective, there's this:
This can only end well! The Coffee Inhaler is available for $3 a pop, or a box of three for $8. You know, if you want to share with friends, or never sleep again. [Le Whif via Boing Boing]

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