Make srikumar as your homepage

< >

 

 
 
Please check "WHAT IS NEW?"  to see new pages we are adding. Enjoy

CAD Free stuff | NRI | Jobs | Home pages Education | Kids | Movies | Games | Music | Indian Music | A  to Z topics | Science| Translate |Type any language| What is New? |

 Engineering| Alumni | Health | Sports |Tourism |Computers | Business | Oman 123| 3D perspectives | Chat Free downloads |Shopping | Family | Comments | Contact
Articles| Advertising | Cooking | Humour | Interior Design| Marketing | Study Abroad |Toastmasters| Useful Tips | Subscribe Newsletter| Job Posting
 

 
Home
Art of Living
CAD
Cooking
Education
Engineering
Freestuff
Feng Shui
 
< >
 
 
Festivals
Games
Health
Question papers
Humour
House plans
Jobs
Interior Design
 
Jokes
Kids
Music
Movies
NRI
Oman123
 

Contact:
L.Srikumar Pai
B.Sc( Engg.), MIE, MIWWA, MICI
Civil Engineer & CAD Specialist
Web master

See my 3d perspectives using AutoCAD & 3DS Max.
3D Album
New

Revolutionary technology produces 'petrol from air'

Main Article page | Beauty articles | Health page | Computers| Diseases | Education | Entertainment | Family
Business |Fitness
Fruits and Vegetables |
Jobs | General | Personality| Technology | Tourism | Useful Tips
Biography Page| Heroes & Incredible peoples | Inventions
Computer Main page | Printer drivers| Antivirus | Children safety | SMS| Articles
 

 
London, October 19 (ANI): A small British firm has come out with a revolutionary new technology that can create synthetic petrol using only air and electricity.

Experts have hailed the astonishing breakthrough as a potential "game-changer" in the battle against climate change and a saviour for the world's energy crisis, the Telegraph reported.

The technology, developed by the company, Air Fuel Syndication, in the north of England and presented to a London engineering conference this week, removes carbon dioxide from the atmosphere.

The "petrol from air" technology involves taking sodium hydroxide and mixing it with carbon dioxide before "electrolysing" the sodium carbonate that it produces to form pure carbon dioxide.

Hydrogen is then produced by electrolysing water vapour captured with a dehumidifier.

The company then uses the carbon dioxide and hydrogen to produce methanol, which in turn is passed through a gasoline fuel reactor, creating petrol.

According to Company officials, they had produced five litres of petrol in less than three months from a small refinery in Stockton-on-Tees, Teesside.

The fuel that is produced can be used in any regular petrol tank and, if renewable energy is used to provide the electricity it could become "completely carbon neutral".

The 1.1m-dollar project, in development for the past two years, is being funded by a group of unnamed philanthropists who believe the technology could prove to be a lucrative way of creating renewable energy.

While the technology has the backing of Britain's Institution of Mechanical Engineers, it has yet to capture the interest of major oil companies.

But company executives hope to build a large plant, which could produce more than a tonne of petrol every day, within two years and a refinery size operation within the next 15 years.

While the describing the technology as being "too good to be true but it is true" Tonight Institution of Mechanical Engineers (IMechE) officials admitted that it could prove to be a "game-changer" in the battle against climate change.

Stephen Tetlow, the IMechE chief executive, hailed the breakthrough as "truly groundbreaking".

"It has the potential to become a great British success story, which opens up a crucial opportunity to reduce carbon emissions. It also has the potential to reduce our exposure to an increasingly volatile global energy market," he said.

Peter Harrison, the company's 58 year-old chief executive, told The Daily Telegraph that he was "excited" about the technology's potential, which "uses renewable energy in a slightly different way".

"People do find it unusual when I tell them what we are working on and realise what it means," said Harrison, a civil engineer from Darlington, Co Durham.

"It is an opportunity for a technology to make an impact on climate change and make an impact on the energy crisis facing this country and the world. It looks and smells like petrol but it is much cleaner and we don't have any nasty bits," he stated. (ANI)

Articles:

 
Search this site
Useful articles
Personality
Reiki
Real Estate 
 
< >
 
Stories
Toastmaster 
Vaastushastra
Free MP3
Results
AutoCAD Blocks
3D Max textures
Printer Drivers
Entrance Test
IAS Topper
 
Public Speaking
Shopping
Study Abroad
Translation
Type any language
Tourism
Useful articles
Useful Tips
Journals
What is New?
 
Admission tests
Biography
Courses & careers
Religious talk
Sports
GSB & Konkani
Astrology

 

 


About us | Submit your site |Suggestions | A to Z topics |Advertising | Auctions | Alumni | Arts | Astrology | Animals | BusinessCooking CAD| Computers | Disabled People
Environment | Education | Engineering | Family | Festivals | Freebies | Fun | Games | Health | India | Jobs | Jokes |Kerala | Kids | NRI News |   Movies | Music | Medicine 
Photography | Religion Science | Shopping | Sports | Tenders | Tourism | Vaastu shastra | Women Zoo
Copyright www.srikumar.com 2009-2010