Toggle light / dark theme

Making clean hydrogen is hard, but researchers just solved a major hurdle

For decades, researchers around the world have searched for ways to use solar power to generate the key reaction for producing hydrogen as a clean energy source—splitting water molecules to form hydrogen and oxygen. However, such efforts have mostly failed because doing it well was too costly, and trying to do it at a low cost led to poor performance.

Now, researchers from The University of Texas at Austin have found a low-cost way to solve one half of the equation, using sunlight to efficiently split off oxygen molecules from water. The finding, published recently in Nature Communications, represents a step forward toward greater adoption of hydrogen as a key part of our energy infrastructure.

As early as the 1970s, researchers were investigating the possibility of using solar energy to generate hydrogen. But the inability to find materials with the combination of properties needed for a device that can perform the key chemical reactions efficiently has kept it from becoming a mainstream method.

Tesla Gigafactory Texas is taking shape in new drone flyover video

A new drone flyover of Tesla Gigafactory Texas is showing some great progress, and it’s even starting to look like the render of the finished building.

The start of production at Gigafactory Texas and Gigafactory Berlin is the most important thing for Tesla’s growth this year.

Starting production in any vehicle program is always difficult, and even more so when you are building a brand new factory from scratch.

Tesla Launches Megapack Order Page & Pricing

According to the order page, the price in California starts at $1235, 890, and Tesla requires $5000 down. This doesn’t include taxes or annual maintenance. Prices do vary by state. Customers can order up to 1000 Megapacks, and if they do, the costs per unit decline with each additional Megapack order.

On its website, Tesla said that it took everything it knew about battery technology to enable the world’s largest energy projects. For these giga-scale projects, a 1 gigawatt-hour (GWh) project provides enough energy storage capacity to power every home in San Francisco for 6 hours.

For those ordering the Tesla Megapack, the earliest deliveries will occur in 2022, but not for all states. California, Nevada, and Texas have 2022 delivery estimates, while others, including my own state of Louisiana, have 2023 estimated delivery dates. The price of the Megapack for Louisiana is $1252, 810.

Exploring Massless Energy Battery Breakthrough

Get Surfshark VPN at https://surfshark.deals/undecided and enter promo code UNDECIDED for 83% off and 3 extra months for free! What if we could take a battery pack’s weight out of the equation? Imagine a car that has no battery pack because the car’s structural battery is the pack? Let’s explore massless energy storage and how a recent breakthrough could be a dramatic shift in how we can store energy in phones, planes, cars… you name it. Watch Exploring When Solid State Batteries Will Arrive: https://youtu.be/3PyXQ0UXk9w?list=PLnTSM-ORSgi7UWp64ZlOKUPNXePMTdU4dSimulation from FLOW-3D®, developed by Flow Science, Inc. (www.flow3d.com).Video script and citations:
https://undecidedmf.com/episodes/exploring-massless-energy-b…hFollow-up podcast:
Video version — https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC4-aWB84Bupf5hxGqrwYqLA
Audio version — http://bit.ly/stilltbdfm.
👋 Support Undecided on Patreon!
https://www.patreon.com/mattferrell.
⚙️ Gear & Products I Like.
Tesla and smart home gear:
https://kit.co/undecidedmfUndecided Amazon store front:
http://bit.ly/UndecidedAmazonFun, nerdy t-shirts:
http://bit.ly/UndecidedShirtsAbstract Ocean Tesla Accessories:
15% Discount — Code: “Undecided“
http://bit.ly/UndecidedAOJeda Tesla Wireless Charger/USB Hub:
http://bit.ly/UndecidedJedaTesla Referral Code:
Get 1000 free supercharging miles.
or a discount on Tesla Solar & Powerwalls.
https://ts.la/matthew84515Visit my Energysage Portal:
Research solar panels and get quotes for free!
http://www.energysage.com/p/undecided/ Or find community solar near you:
https://communitysolar.energysage.com/?rc=p-undecided.
👉 Follow Me.

https://twitter.com/mattferrell.
https://twitter.com/undecidedMFInstagram.
https://www.instagram.com/mattferrell.
https://www.instagram.com/undecidedmfFacebook.
https://www.facebook.com/undecidedMF/Website.
https://undecidedmf.com.
📺 YouTube Tools I Recommend.
Audio file(s) provided by Epidemic Sound.
http://bit.ly/UndecidedEpidemicTubeBuddy.
https://www.tubebuddy.com/undecidedVidIQ
https://vidiq.com/undecided.
I may earn a small commission for my endorsement or recommendation to products or services linked above, but I wouldn’t put them here if I didn’t like them. Your purchase helps support the channel and the videos I produce. Thank you.

Solid State Batteries — Autumn 2021 mass production in Japan. Is it FINALLY happening?

Solid state batteries are the long-promised Holy Grail of battery technology. They’re smaller and better than existing Lithium Ion batteries. They charge more quickly and last much longer. What’s not to like? Trouble is, no-one’s managed to mass produce one at any useful scale yet. Turns out it’s quite tricky to make them reliable! Now though, two major Japanese companies are finally firing up their full production lines. So will 2021 be the year?

Video Transcripts available at our website.
http://www.justhaveathink.com.

Help support this channels independence at http://www.patreon.com/justhaveathink.

Or with a donation via Paypal by clicking here.
https://www.paypal.com/cgi-bin/webscr?cmd=_s-xclick&hosted_b…source=url.

You can also help keep my brain ticking over during the long hours of research and editing via the nice folks at BuyMeACoffee.com.
https://www.buymeacoffee.com/justhaveathink.

Download the Just Have a Think App from the AppStore or Google Play.

Cheap, sustainable, readily available plasma tech could replace rare iridium

A team led by a researcher from the University of Sydney has developed a low-cost, sustainable, and readily available technology that can dim the screens of electronic devices, anti-reflection automobile mirrors, and smart architectural windows at a fraction of the cost of current technology.

It would replace one of the world’s scarcest—yet highly ubiquitous in use—modern materials: indium. A rare chemical element, that it is widely used in devices such as smartphones and computers, windscreen glass and self-dimming windows.

Although small amounts are used to manufacture smart screens, indium is expensive as it is hard to source; it naturally occurs only in small deposits. Industrial indium is often made as a byproduct of zinc mining, which means a shortage could occur if demand for optoelectronic devices—such as LCDs and touch panels—ramps up.

/* */