01-31-2014, 09:23 AM
Scientists in Iceland attempted to drill into their volcano to tap into a super hot source of water to power electrical turbines. Does anyone know if this is substantially different from the geothermal wells now in Puna (and in the planning stages)? From the article:
Scientists were going to attempt to drill into a reservoir of water so much hotter than anything tapped before that the water it contained was thought to exist in a fourth state of matter distinct from liquid, solid and steam. This super-heated water, which is in a state known as “supercritical,” that is beyond the point at which a substance can be either a liquid or a gas, exists only under conditions of extreme heat and pressure.
It would be a world-changing discovery, because if you can get supercritical water to the earth’s surface and into a power plant, you can extract ten times as much energy from it as you can from typical steam or hot water.
http://qz.com/172642/why-volcanoes-are-t...he-future/
Scientists were going to attempt to drill into a reservoir of water so much hotter than anything tapped before that the water it contained was thought to exist in a fourth state of matter distinct from liquid, solid and steam. This super-heated water, which is in a state known as “supercritical,” that is beyond the point at which a substance can be either a liquid or a gas, exists only under conditions of extreme heat and pressure.
It would be a world-changing discovery, because if you can get supercritical water to the earth’s surface and into a power plant, you can extract ten times as much energy from it as you can from typical steam or hot water.
http://qz.com/172642/why-volcanoes-are-t...he-future/
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