Long long ago and not very far away, it used to be called alternative energy. Now it's called renewable energy. Actually, it's energy not controlled by corporate eco-thugs.
Martin proposed harvesting wave energy, transmitting it either as compressed air or hydraulic pressure and then converting it to anhydrous ammonia. In the mid-80's, my friend Tip and I used to go surfing off Post Point in Glouster Gull dory. It took two people because you had to row faster than the wave to get on top and surf it in. This was a pointless exercise if there was less than gale force winds because even though Post Point is one of the wavy areas of the bay, the waves aren't big enough to break the hull loose from displacement to planing (which is what surfing is all about..) Wave power (particularly in inland waters like Puget Sound) is like wind power. You either get too little or too much and not much in between most of the time.
The ammonia as fuel is interesting until you get into the details. The
Haber synthesis process typically runs at 15–25 MPa (150–250 bar)
and between 300 and 550 °C, as the gases are passed over four beds of
catalyst, with cooling between each pass so as to maintain a reasonable equilibrium constant.
On each pass only about 15% conversion occurs, but any unreacted gases
are recycled, and eventually an overall conversion of 97% is achieved.
Use as fuel is a little bit more do-able. You run the anhydrous ammonia through a cracker with iron catalyst. It's endothermic, so you have to heat the bugger to get it to break (2)NH3 -> N2 + (3)H2, so what you are running on is hydrogen diluted 3:1 with nitrogen. However, it takes about 15% of the heat energy for heating the catalyst, so the process is capped at 85% efficiency before it gets to the engine.
These guys built a hot rod that runs on anhydrous ammonia, but how it works is a secret. The exact opposite of what we are trying to do in the hackerspace movement.
I've worked with wind and micro-hydro energy. If you go
here (stop looking at all the pretty girls, they are too old for you) and jump back using the Prev button to #85, you will see me leveling the foundation of a 30-foot octahedron module tower for a tail-dragger wind turbine. It was on the ridge that runs from Fairhaven College to Buchanan Towers.
The ridge is a sandstone fold, so I had to cut into three feet of sandstone because the guys fabricating the foundation anchors followed the plans blindly. The result was I had to make three 12" diameter holes three feet deep in Chuckanut sandstone. I started out by forging some large star drills out of gas pipe with pieces of broken file hammer welded in for the cutting edge. They were very slow going. One guy held the drill in a big pump pliers while I swung an eight-pound sledge. After about a foot, I was tired and getting frustrated.
From mucking out the bottom of the hole, I knew the sandstone was wet. So I figured if I got it hot enough, fast enough, it would soften the stone. So I went over to the area where Lazar was rebuilding VW's. He had a lot of bad engine casings and brake drum housings. These were made from an aluminum-magnesium alloy. I smashed up a bucketful of fist sized pieces. Then I built a fire in the bottom of the hole and dumped the metal in. Blowing air into the fire got it hot enough to slump the metal, but it wasn't enough to fully liquify it.
I sprinted up to the chem lab and wrapped about a quarter pound of potassium nitrate in several layers of newspaper. Sprinting back to the worksite, I sent everybody on the team to a) rig all the hoses from the Outback garden to the site (there wasn't enough hose) and b) raid the dorms for water-filled fire extinguishers. Then I pitched the bundle into the hole and ran like hell. The newspaper insulated the nitrate long enough for me to get clear before there was this big WHOOSH and flaming magnesium went thirty feet in every direction. There was a very nice mushroom cloud of white smoke (mostly magnesium oxide.)
Now the magnesium was fully melted and burning slowly (not much air at the bottom of the hole.) A 10' length of gas pipe (we had a big stash of it for some reason) and a water fire extinguisher provided a source of oxygen and hydrogen -- magnesium burns hot enough to disassociate water. Ever shot of water, we got a small FOOP. Eventually, the magnesium was all consumed and the water put the fire out. About 8" of the sandstone was
Picture # 85 is me leveling the three anchors after pouring the concrete. Tower bolted up in one day, easy. Picture #89 is me and the model of the tower.
It lasted until the first November storms -- 95 mile an hour gusts. The feathering mechanism on the turbine was supposed to turn the blades into the wind if spinning too fast. It jammed. One strut failed in compression and that was all she wrote. I've still got the plans for the tower if anybody wants to build one.
So I'm not much of a fan of wind or wave power. Micro-hydro, that's another story. I'll get to that later.