Renewable Energy From The Ocean, This Time With Bone
Today’s high tech, nanoscale materials are lending new life to the dream of harvesting renewable energy from the ocean through osmosis.
Today’s high tech, nanoscale materials are lending new life to the dream of harvesting renewable energy from the ocean through osmosis.
A team of researchers from Stanford University has estimated that rivers could provide about 13 percent of the world’s current energy needs, but they’re not talking about hydropower. Instead, they envision renewable energy based on the principle of entropy, as fresh water from
As the world approaches peak water, technology to harvest freshwater from non-potable sources becomes increasingly important. Researchers at Yale University have recently developed such desalination technology using the power of osmosis.