acbytesla
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Dec 14, 2012
- Messages
- 39,400
It's all about the battery and will continue to be. Improve batteries or supercapacitors to 2000, wh per kg or 10 times what is is today and IC engines won't be anywhereThis is less the case these days. Not too long ago, I was on a town panel that was considering our town as the land destination for a planned high voltage DC cable that was to be laid down the tectonic crease of Lake Champlain from Canada. Alas, the plan was nixed, not for its practicality, but it seems largely for reasons of politics, in favor of the usual high-voltage AC overhead line elsewhere in the state (Too bad, as our little town would have gotten a big rental landfall). But from what I heard, this scheme can be very practical indeed, with very little loss, in part because inductive loss is not such a factor, and it requires only a single positive conductor. This was not a very practical idea until recently, when efficient solid state devices are able to convert the power into useable AC, but it is doable right now.
I agree that at the momentary level, when battery technology was so poor, it made sense to work on improving the ICE engine. No doubt things would have been a little better if more engineering energy had been directed at electric development, just as they would have been better if they had been directed at better mass transit, but they weren't, and part of the reason is that many of the peripheral developments had not occurred. Solid state electronics help in all sorts of ways, especially in making it possible for various high voltages to be used that aren't convenient for a battery alone. But remember that before 1920, much of the technology of electric cars had been well developed. You could take a 1920 Owen Magnetic, and if you had a good enough battery and the electronics needed to output 24 volts, you could replace the engine-generator on it and you'd have an electric-driven car complete with regenerative braking. Improvements in motor design and efficiency no doubt would help too,
but it's mostly an issue of battery output.
A liter of gasoline has hundreds of times the energy density of a lithium battery. But internal combustion engines are actually poor at converting that energy into usable power. 75 percent is wasted as heat. There is also the cost of transporting it from refineries to your local gas station. On the other hand, electric motors are very efficient at turning electricity into power and locomotion. The problem is the volume and mass of the batteries/electricity storage.
Look at trains. Almost every train running today turns the wheels with electric motors and that has been true since the 1940s. But most of them use diesel internal combustion engines to create the electricity. If there are no overhead wires or a third rail, those trains burn a big tank of diesel. Electric aviation won't be economical until batteries are improved. So ICE will live on.