
The Sustainable Global Energy Economy: Hydrogen or Silicon?
Author(s) -
W.E. Bardsley
Publication year - 2008
Publication title -
natural resources research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.742
H-Index - 47
eISSN - 1573-8981
pISSN - 1520-7439
DOI - 10.1007/s11053-008-9077-6
Subject(s) - renewable energy , silicon , electricity generation , environmental science , natural resource economics , power (physics) , economics , materials science , engineering , electrical engineering , metallurgy , physics , quantum mechanics
A sustainable global silicon energy economy is proposed as a potential alternative to the
hydrogen economy. This first visualisation of a silicon energy economy is based on largescale
and carbon-neutral metallic silicon production from major smelters in North Africa
and elsewhere, supplied by desert silica sand and electricity from extensive solar
generating systems. The resulting “fuel silicon” is shipped around the world to emission-free
silicon power stations for either immediate electricity generation or stockpiling. The
high energy density of silicon and its stable storage make it an ideal material for
maintaining national economic functioning through security of base load power supply
from a renewable source. This contrasts with the present situation of fossil fuel usage
with its associated global warming and geopolitical supply uncertainties. Critical
technological requirements for the silicon economy are carbon-neutral silicon production
and the development of efficient silicon-fired power stations capable of high-temperature
rapid oxidation of fuel silicon. A call is made for the development of research effort into
these specific engineering issues, and also with respect to large-scale economical solar
power generation
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