The total energy contained by the steam must be no greater than the input light 
energy.  This is not magic, just a way to concentrate the incoming light.  I am 
assuming that LENR of some sort is not contributing.

Dave

 

 

 

-----Original Message-----
From: Axil Axil <janap...@gmail.com>
To: vortex-l <vortex-l@eskimo.com>
Sent: Wed, Jan 22, 2014 1:33 pm
Subject: [Vo]:Nanoparticles make steam without bring water to a boil.



http://www.technologyreview.com/news/507821/nanoparticles-make-steam-without-bringing-water-to-a-boil/
Nanoparticles can concentrate the energy of photons on a localized nanometric 
scale. Here is a application of this ability.  
Steam is a key ingredient in a wide range of industrial and commercial 
processes—including electricity generation, water purification, alcohol 
distillation, and medical equipment sterilization.
Generating that steam, however, typically requires vast amounts of energy to 
heat and eventually boil water or another fluid. Now researchers at Rice 
University have found a shortcut. Using light-absorbing nanoparticles suspended 
in water, the group was able to turn the water molecules surrounding the 
nanoparticles into steam while scarcely raising the temperature of the 
remaining water. The trick could dramatically reduce the cost of many 
steam-reliant processes.

The Rice team used a Fresnel lens to focus sunlight on a small tube of water 
containing high concentrations of nanoparticles suspended in the fluid. The 
water, which had been cooled to near freezing, began generating steam within 
five to 20 seconds, depending on the type of nanoparticles used. Changes in 
temperature, pressure, and mass revealed that 82 percent of the sunlight 
absorbed by the nanoparticles went directly to generating steam while only 18 
percent went to heating water.
“It’s a new way to make steam without boiling water,” says Naomi Halas, 
director of the Laboratory for Nanophotonics at Rice University. Halas says 
that the work “opens up a lot of interesting doors in terms of what you can use 
steam for.”
The new technique could, for instance, lead to inexpensive steam-generation 
devices for small-scale water purification, sterilization of medical 
instruments, and sewage treatment in developing countries with limited 
resources and infrastructure.
The use of nanoparticles to increase heat transfer in water and other fluids 
has been well studied, but few researchers have looked at using the particles 
to absorb light and generate steam.
In the current study, Halas and colleagues used nanoparticles optimized to 
absorb the widest possible spectrum of sunlight. When light hits the particles, 
their temperature quickly rises to well above 100 °C, the boiling point of 
water, causing surrounding water molecules to vaporize.
Precisely how the particles and water molecules interact remains somewhat of a 
mystery. Conventional heat-transfer models suggest that the absorbed sunlight 
should dissipate into the surrounding fluid before causing any water to boil. 
“There seems to be some nanoscale thermal barrier, because it’s clearly making 
steam like crazy,” Halas says.
The system devised by Halas and colleagues exhibited an efficiency of 24 
percent in converting sunlight to steam.
Todd Otanicar, a mechanical engineer at the University of Tulsa who was not 
involved in the current study, says the findings could have significant 
implications for large-scale solar thermal energy generation. Solar thermal 
power stations typically use concentrated sunlight to heat a fluid such as oil, 
which is then used to heat water to generate steam. Otanicar estimates that by 
generating steam directly with nanoparticles in water, such a system could see 
an increased efficiency of 3 to 5 percent and a cost savings of 10 percent 
because a less complex design could be used.
Otanicar cautions that durability—the ability of nanoparticles to repeatedly 
absorb sunlight and generate steam—still has to be proved, but adds that the 24 
percent efficiency achieved in the current study is encouraging. “It’s just the 
beginning for optimizing this approach,” he says.

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