Hydrogen from Seaweed.
Ideal application for the HOX-He Mobile Unit.
Hydrogen + Oxygen fueled Heat Engine
New, clean heat source that easily retrofits into all of Puerto Rico's existing steam turbine electrical generators.
Hydrogen combustion in pure Oxygen produces only recoverable water, H2O.
NO CO2 or HARMFUL POLLUTING nitrogen oxides. NOx.
Could Puerto Rico produce all it's electrical needs from Sargasso Seaweed?
Puerto Rico's Electrical Grid
Hydrogen from any Biomass
The resulting Hydrogen and Oxygen could be used with the Mobile HOX-He units, retrofitted to provide the steam required to power all of Puerto Rico's thermal power plants.Their existing Coal and Oil furnaces could even be left intact
Microbial Electrolysis Cell (MEC) and Microbial Electrolytic Carbon Capture (MECC) are already producing 2% of the world's industrial Hydrogen from Human Wastewater.
Both MEC and MECC achieve an efficiency of NET POSITIVE Energy Production of 144%. Remarkably, MECC is also a process that has the potential to substantially contribute to the furthering of sustainable energy practices.
MECC results in an actual NET NEGATIVE Carbon Emission from wastewater treatment by removal of carbon dioxide (CO2) emitted during the treatment process in the form of calcite (CaCO3), a widely used industrial material and production of profitable Hydrogen gas.
Undoubtedly Hydrogen from Waste Water is the real goal.
However, while waste water contains toxic pathogens, Fermenting Sargasso contains the same microbes as the Human Intestines and foods like Kimchi. Sargasso can
easily serve as a excellent benign biomass substitute for many coastal Electrical Plant retrofits.
The Many Uses for Fermented Sargassum.
Fertilizer, Animal & Fish Foodstock, Cosmetics and Pharmaceuticals.
ATTENTION CARIBBEAN AREA!
A New and Urgent Sargasso Challenge.
A vast NEW Bloom of Sargassum presents both a significant threat and opportunity for the entire Caribbean Region.
Can Hydrogen from Sargasso be the right solution at the right time?
A completely New Sargassum bloom has recently become a major threat for the entire Caribbean basin.
For millennia a large Sargasso bloom existed in the north Atlantic. It was first recorded by Christopher Columbus on his initial voyage in 1492. Circular ocean currents normally keep the large mass in a permanent location.
At
the same time, several start up firms are trying to adapt Sargasso to
commercial products that include, fertilizer, animal and fish feed,
cosmetics, nutritional supplements and medicines. In Mexico they are
used to make dried compacted bricks for building materials.
Using fermented sargasso in seawater electrolyte to produce hydrogen would be an ingenious solution to a serious threat.