Talk:Researchers discover high temperature enables more efficient hydrogen generation
Original author- does the article say that less energy TOTAL is required to electrolicize water? Because you'd need a good deal of energy to heat the water to 800 degrees C anyway... This is just a way that you could clear up immidiate questions that people will have when reading this news story.
- Hmmm... my intention in framing the article stub was simply to report on a scientific discovery, and not to frame the issue in terms of a practical process which had been designed in full. I suppose efficiency can mean many things in many contexts... I meant less electricity was used to produce the hydrogen. I realize that the new york times website requires registration, so perhaps you couldn't read the source. The Idaho National Engineering and Environmental Laboratory is a government nuclear research lab - so their sketch of a practical process would be to install extra gears in the heart of a nuclear power plant where one would have that heat already naturally present. I suppose there are other ways to find that heat - geothermal or solar reflection...Rainbird 17:09, 29 Nov 2004 (UTC)
- One thing I think is confusing about the way the article stub now reads, is that people know that water boils at 100degrees celsius - so the question in readers' minds would be how can water exist at 800degrees celsius? Of course, through creative technology, this is possible - I suppose through containing the water in a vessel of some sort and disallowing it to evaporate... I'm not a scientist, myself, so after only a brief reading of the New York Times article, I wasn't comfortable elaborating any further than I did. Sometimes it takes reading what you've written again, in the morning to see where the text needs to be clarified. As is traditional at a wiki, everybody is invited to help develop this article... please do - I'm rather new to the wikimedia websites and I'd appreciate watching the collaborative process Rainbird 17:31, 29 Nov 2004 (UTC)
OK. now that I had a chance to read the news article I understand. The idea is to use the waste heat generated from a nuclear reactor to heat the water to that temperature, and then used some of the produced electricity to run electrolysis. Hmm... doesn't look too efficient. A nuclear reactor with the ability to run 300,000 window air conditioners could only produce the energy equivalent of 5 gallons of gasoline per second. Not very impressive.
- A nuclear reactor could certainly power more than 300,000 window air conditioners. Cap'n Refsmmat 23:27, 29 Nov 2004 (UTC)
Just a question. Is it okay to date an article as Nov. 28 although it uses a source dated as Nov. 29? Tomos 06:27, 7 Dec 2004 (UTC)
Jeremy Desterhoft reference?
editI can't find Jeremy Desterhoft on the internet, and he isn't mentioned in the artcles you link to, and the quote from him makes no sense. I'm failing this article. Of course, I could just change it, and approve the article, but I wanna make a point about the article stages and "test the system" so to speak. ;) --Regebro 19:11, 8 Dec 2004 (UTC)