However capable and skillful an individual may be, left alone, he or she will not survive. When we are sick or very young or very old, we must depend on the support of others. There is no significant division between us and other people, because our basic natures are the same. If we wish to ensure everyone’s peace and happiness we need to cultivate a healthy respect for the diversity of our peoples and cultures, founded on an understanding of this fundamental sameness of all human beings.
Friday, November 16, 2012
Sunday, November 11, 2012
Give "Thanks" To a Veteran!
Sincerely hoping that we all take some time out of our busy days to reflect on all of the sacrifices that have been made to ensure that we maintain all of our rights and freedoms that we enjoy each and everyday! To all of the brave men and women in our service corps, you are what have made America the land of opportunity and the great nation that we so dearly love! Please, if you know of, or happen to meet any of our active or retired military personnel, thank them for their dedication and service to our country! :)
Friday, November 9, 2012
African Girls' Pee-Powered Generator Raises Questions
A group of 14-year-old school girls show off a urine-powered generator at an innovation fair in Lagos, Nigeria.
By John Roach
NBC News
A urine-powered generator presented by a group of school-age girls at an innovation fair in Africa is generating buzz as a world-changing breakthrough, but a reality-check with the expert who invented the contraption at the heart of the technology might flush those expectations down the drain.
“What these kids are doing is taking urea electrolysis and making hydrogen and then using that hydrogen to make electricity,” Gerardine Botte, a chemical engineer at Ohio University who invented the urea electrolysis process, told NBC News when asked to comment on the generator.
According to information provided on the Maker Faire Africa website about the pee-powered system, one liter of urine provides six hours of electricity, though the site lacks details on how many watts are generated or what that electricity could power for six hours: an iPod or a neighborhood?
Another concern is the implication that the students get more energy out of the urine than they use to prepare it in the first place. That isn't true, according to Botte.
“It is a high school project, so don’t take it [so seriously],” Botte said, suggesting the students work with an engineer to understand the technology and its appropriate applications.
For Botte, the technology is most practical as a way to make the wastewater treatment process more energy efficient.
All wastewater treatment plants consume energy, she explained. Since urea is already being collected by such facilities, Botte says it makes sense to extract hydrogen from it. This in turn can be used to generate electricity, thus reducing the amount of outside energy required to run the wastewater treatment process.
“You will never get more energy out than you put in because you are treating urea … but it is a unique and elegant way to treat urine waste, which will allow you to co-generate electricity,” she said.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)