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Where’s my
pneumatic car?
Techno Talk
Max the Magnificent
Electric vehicles are a great idea, but the elements forming their batteries involve intensive and polluting
mining operations and 70% of the electricity used to charge these batteries comes from nonrenewable
sources, especially fossil fuels. Could pneumatic cars running on compressed air provide the answer?
I
f you look at a map of the world,
it’s easy to visualise the various continents as being part of a gigantic jigsaw
puzzle. A big clue is that – in addition
to their mirror-image shapes – the geologies at the edges of continents like
the east coast of south America and the
west coast of Africa match up.
The idea of continental drift was
first espoused in 1912 by the German
climatologist, geologist, geophysicist,
and meteorologist, Alfred Wegener (I
have no idea what he did in his spare
time). However, it wasn’t until technology was brought to bear that the
underlying mechanisms began to be
properly understood.
First, we discovered that the Earth’s
magnetic field periodically reverses. Many rocks contain iron-bearing
minerals that can act like tiny magnets. When these rocks are heated and
cooled, these tiny magnets become
aligned to the current orientation of the
Earth’s magnetic field. According to the
United States Geological Survey, these
reversals can occur as often as every
10 thousand years or as infrequently
as every 50 million years (the last reversal was about 780,000 years ago).
Second, during the late 1950s and
early 1960s, the magnetic fields associated with rock samples retrieved from
the floor of the Atlantic Ocean reflected
how new crust is forming along the underwater Mid-Atlantic-Ridge, thereby
pushing South America and Africa apart.
The amazing thing to me is that the
theory of plate tectonics (the mechanism underlying continental drift) did
not experience wide acceptance by most
scientists in geology until around 1967,
which is ten years after I was born, for
goodness’ sake!
Fancy a stroll?
Bolstered by modern technology, scientists can tell us all sorts of interesting
things. For example, we now know that
during the last ice age about 18,000 years
ago, what is now Manhattan in New York
was covered by an ice sheet about 600m
(2,000 feet) high.
8
So much of the world’s water was
trapped in ice at that time that sea levels fell by around 120m (400 feet). As
a result, it was possible for people to
stroll from Europe to Britain. Over time,
things started to warm, the ice melted,
sea levels rose, and Britain returned to
being an island, which is just the way
we like it (and quite possibly for our
neighbours too!).
Got gas?
Rising and falling temperatures are all
part of the natural cycle. Sometimes these
changes are extreme, with the world being
much colder and hotter than it is today.
For example, scientists currently believe
that the entire planet has sometimes been
completely covered with snow and ice.
At other times, the world has been like
a sauna. For example, researchers at
the National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration (NOAA) now believe
that the global average temperature toward the end of the Neoproterozoic Era
(around 550 million years ago) may have
risen as high as ~32°C (90°F).
The problem is that changes that would
typically span hundreds of thousands of
years are now transpiring in decades. Due
to climate change, deserts are expanding, glaciers are retreating, permafrost
is melting, sea levels are rising, heat
waves and wildfires are becoming more
common, and the world is experiencing
more intense storms, droughts, and other
weather extremes. Even worse, I don’t
have anything suitable to wear.
The primary cause of our current problems is the amount of greenhouse gases
like carbon dioxide we are pumping into
the atmosphere. And the primary source
of carbon dioxide is burning fossil fuels
like coal, oil and natural gas.
Got wind?
One way to at least begin to mitigate our
current climate change woes is to use renewable energy sources like wind power.
A recent report by the US Department
of Energy (DoE) predicts that wind turbines will provide 20% of US electricity
needs by 2030.
These things can be huge. Each of the
blades used in a typical modern landbased wind turbine are around 50m (170
feet) long, while China’s LZ Blades company currently holds the record with a
wind turbine whose blades are 123m
(404 feet) long!
Are electric cars the answer?
There are currently around 1.5 billion
cars in the world. The vast majority
burn gasoline or diesel, but the number of electric vehicles (EVs) is starting
to rise. One’s knee-jerk reaction might
be to think that our problems would be
solved if all cars were EVs but – sad to
relate – that’s not the case.
The first issue is the batteries. Current
automotive battery technologies are based
on lithium, nickel, manganese, cobalt and
graphite, along with a bunch of rare earth
elements, all of which involve intensive
and polluting mining operations. And
I’m not even considering the problems
associated with recycling and disposal
when these batteries go end-of-life.
The second issue is charging the little
scamps. Renewable energy sources (sun,
wind, hydro) currently account for only
around 30% of global electricity generation. The rest comes from nuclear or
– you guessed it – burning fossil fuels.
Where’s my pneumatic car?
For the past 20 years, I’ve been hearing about a novel French automobile
company called Moteur Developement
International that’s developing a pneumatic car that runs on compressed air.
Admittedly, the range would only be
around 100 miles on a full ‘charge,’ but
that would cover 99% of my personal
needs. Using a small pump located inside the car, its tank could be recharged
for only a few pennies by plugging it into
a regular wall outlet. Also, electricity to
run the pump could come from solar
panels mounted on the roof.
Will this technology ever come to pass?
I don’t know. I’m starting to lose hope.
What I do know is that if these ever do
go into production, I’ll be at the front
of the queue!
Practical Electronics | November | 2023
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