Poster's note - maybe these personal profiles will be of interest to the
list

A

http://m.theengineer.co.uk/1014047.article?mobilesite=enabled

Leading wave energy pioneer Prof Stephen Salter

26 September 2012 | By Stuart NathanProf Stephen Salter

Prof Stephen Salter, technical adviser at Aquamarine Power, believes
geoengineering could help to mitigate some of the most pressing effects of
climate change. Stuart Nathan reportsWhat do you do when you’re the father
of a whole industry? Do you sit back and relax, or carry on to pastures
new? If you’re Prof Stephen Salter, widely acknowledged as the leading
pioneer of marine energy, then you take the latter path.Salter’s work on
wave energy at Edinburgh University in the 1970s led to the development of
the device known as Salter’s Duck, the first practical wave energy
converter and the basis of the technology now used in machines such as the
Pelamis ‘sea-snake’. Wave energy remains controversial — Salter still
believes that development of the Duck was derailed by pressure from the
nuclear industry — but not content with that, Salter is now deeply involved
with an even more controversial sector. He’s convinced that geoengineering
could be a valuable tool to mitigate some of the most pressing effects of
climate change; and he believes that it could — and should — be implemented
sooner rather than later.Geoengineering is the use of technology to affect
the climate deliberately, to induce a cooling effect globally or in a
smaller region. Salter is an advocate of the high-albedo cloud method of
cooling — generating reflective clouds that bounce the sun’s radiation back
into space, preventing it from reaching the Earth’s surface. There are two
methods available for doing this. One works by injecting an aerosol of
sulphate — sulphur-dioxide gas is usually proposed — into the stratosphere
to create a mist of dilute sulphuric acid droplets. The other, which is
favoured by Salter, uses a mist of very fine droplets of water, which act
as nucleation agents for the water vapour already in the atmosphere,
generating clouds in the vicinity of the mist generator.

High-albedo clouds

Salter believes that the planet is now at a crucial tipping point, with his
concern being triggered by recent news of record low levels of ice at the
Arctic. ‘There really is quite a lot of urgency,’ he told The Engineer.
The Piomas (Pan-Arctic Ice Ocean Modeling and Assimilation System)
programme, which is run by the University of Washington’s Applied Physics
Laboratory and Polar Science centre, models ice thickness and volume, and
has predicted a record low level this year. ‘Piomas is just a computer
program but it’s checked by chaps getting out of submarines with tape
measures, and those agree with the model,’ Salter said. ‘The model tends to
overestimate thick and underestimate thin, so it’s probably worse than
Piomas thinks.’Another concern for Salter is data on the release of Arctic
methane, which comes from permafrost regions; as they warm, methane trapped
in the soil is released, and vegetation that had been frozen begins to rot
as it thaws, generating more methane. This is a natural process, but
climate change may accelerate it. And as methane is a far more powerful
greenhouse gas than carbon dioxide (CO2), increasing releases of it may
further accelerate global warming. A paper by researchers from the
University of Alaska at Fairbanks published in May in the journal Nature
Geoscience (read it here) identified some 150,000 sites in Alaska and
Greenland where methane is seeping from the ground; examination of the
isotopes of carbon from these sites showed that the methane was both
ancient and modern in origin, possibly from lake-bed coal and gas deposits,
and rotting vegetation respectively. A report from Russian scientists on
similar sites in Siberia is expected towards the end of this year.Salter
believes that a cooling effect could be generated by producing high-albedo
clouds in the polar region, and wants to target two particular areas.
‘There’s warm water flowing into the Arctic between Norway and Iceland, and
similarly there’s a net flow through the Bering Strait of 8,000m3/sec,’ he
said. ‘So what I’m looking at now is how we could release spray clouds from
the Faroe Islands and the coast of Norway, and from the Aleutian Islands.
Cooling those areas by just a tiny bit — 1°C would be enough — would reduce
the heat going into the Arctic considerably.’Salter prefers the water spray
to the sulphate aerosol method because, he says, there are concerns over
some side-effects of the latter. ‘There is now research showing that while
it cools the world in general, it actually warms up the Arctic, in winter
particularly,’ he said. ‘Because sulphates have a two-year lifespan in the
atmosphere, you can’t be sure that what you put up on the Equator isn’t
going to be around in a couple of years’ time during an Arctic winter, and
by cooling the equator by a couple of watts, you could end up warming the
Arctic by 10 watts.’Previously, Salter has advocated placing spray units to
generate clouds on purpose-built ships, with the sprays powered by
underwater turbines (see our previous interview with him here). However, he
believes that the cooling of the Arctic is so urgent that it would be
better achieved using sprays powered by simple diesel engines. ‘It’s just
the quickest way to get the spray up,’ he said.

Billions of nozzles

The spray devices themselves are of Salter’s own design, and are based on
silicon wafers. A layer of silicon oxide is deposited onto one side of the
wafer, then another layer of silicon on top of that. ‘You etch tiny
nozzles, sub-micron sized, through the thin layer of silicon, stopping at
the oxide layer, then you etch from the other side, through the thicker
layer of silicon, again stopping at the oxide film. Then you etch away the
oxide film. So you have maybe a thousand sub-micron nozzles meeting a much
bigger nozzle, about 50 microns, going the other way. That means I can get
two billion nozzles onto one 200mm-diameter wafer.’The pumps push seawater,
which has been filtered through a system designed to remove viruses from
drinking water, against the large-nozzle side of the wafer, which is then
pulsed with ultrasonics to force the water through the small nozzles. ‘It’s
the number of droplets that matters [for nucleation],’ Salter said. ‘But
they also need to be within a fairly narrow range of size, and that might
vary. I’m designing the wafer for a single ultrasonic frequency, and we can
change the size of the droplets by adjusting the flow rate, but keep the
same number of droplets.’This system has to be tested, and Salter is
funding this himself. ‘I earn enough through consultancy on marine energy
to be able to take a tiny bit of the spray generation system — a 4mm circle
— that I can test in the lab,’ he said. With these results, and the
increasing concern over ice thickness and volume, he believes that funding
could become available. ‘I have no idea where I can get funding at the
moment,’ he said, ‘but I think a lot will change over the next winter.’
Ever optimistic, Salter believes that the system would take as little as 18
months to build, install and start operating. ‘It should be possible with a
big effort,’ he said.

>From wave to wind to road, and back

One of the innovations Salter designed for the wave-generation Duck, a
hydraulic transmission system, is now in trials for use with large wind
turbines, and could have a future in fuel-efficient cars. A  company set up
to develop the transmission, Artemis Intelligent Power, was acquired by
Mitsubishi Power Systems in 2010, and is now carrying out further
development.Artemis’s technology, which it calls Digital Displacement, uses
computer-controlled solenoid valves to control the flow of high-pressure
oil through cylinders arranged radially around a rotating eccentric
(off-centre) shaft rotated by a turbine, engine or other machine.
Originally developed to take power from the low-speed, high-torque rotors
in wave energy converters, the transmission system is much lighter than
other transmission — a major advantage for a system that has to be housed
on top of a very tall, slim tower — and has a modular design that makes it
easy to maintain inside a nacelle, the company claims.‘Mitsubishi is
setting a fierce development pace on this,’ Salter commented. ‘I think this
is exactly the right way to develop it — make mistakes on wind, then prove
it on tidal, and then we’d know we can design something that will work
underwater with waves.’The system has also been installed on a BMW 530i in
2008, the company says, and was found to double the miles per gallon
achieved on the urban cycle compared with the same model with a manual
six-speed gearbox. ‘Overall, including highway driving, the prototype had
approximately 30 per cent lower CO2 emissions than it had before Artemis
fitted its energy-saving transmissions,’ the company claims.

Prof Stephen SalterWave energy pioneer

Education

1956–61 Salter served an apprenticeship as a fitter and toolmaker with
Saunders Roe on the Isle of Wight. He worked on the Black Knight rocketry
project, then read physics at the University of Cambridge

Career

1962–67 Research assistant, University of Cambridge
1967 Research fellow, University of Edinburgh, working on artifical
intelligence in robots
1973 Now a lecturer at Edinburgh, Salter begins working on wave energy
1974 Invents ‘Salter’s Duck’
1977 Designs and builds world’s first multidirectional wave tank
1986 Appointed to a personal chair in engineering design at Edinburgh
2004 Awarded MBE for services to engineering
2009 Joins Aquamarine Power (developer of Oyster wave energy converter) as
technical adviser
2012 Receives Royal Academy of Engineering’s Sustained Achievement Award

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