Energy transmission: Difference between revisions

From apm
Jump to navigation Jump to search
 
(2 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown)
Line 20: Line 20:
* '''[[Energy conversion]]'''
* '''[[Energy conversion]]'''
* [[Power density]]
* [[Power density]]
* [[Thermal energy transport]]
* '''[[Transportation and transmission]]'''
* '''[[Transportation and transmission]]'''
----
* [[Mechanical energy transmission]]
* [[Chemical energy transmission]]
* [[Thermal energy transmission]]


== External links ==
== External links ==
Line 29: Line 32:


[[Category:Technology level III]]
[[Category:Technology level III]]
[[Category:Far term target]]

Latest revision as of 21:30, 29 March 2026

Up: Transportation and transmission


Advanced atomically precise systems will enable some new and promising kinds of energy transmission.

Application cases:

Packing energy storage cells in Mechanical energy transmission cables is practical for all but the most extreme power conversion speed requirements (chemomechanical converters are slower than "simple" redirections). Moderately done the tensile strength of the cable (which bears the kinetic power) does not fall much. Interesting is that there is a certain speed where the quadratically rising kinetic energy starts to exceed the linear rising chemical one.

(TODO: What is the speed approximately where kinetic energy transport exceeds chemical energy transport?
Make a speed vs chemical & kinetic power graph.)

Related


External links

Wikipedia: