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Posts Tagged ‘bloom’

Bloom Box: But will it power my robotic suit of armor??

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I’ve been cautiously optimistic while watching the progress of the Bloom Box for some time and Bloom has finally had an official coming out party.

As both a power hog in an industry notorious for power hogging, and a concerned peak-energy doomsayer I would love to see the results promised from the Bloom Box become part of every day life.

So far?  Sounds great.  But of course if a team’s marketing department for example says Product-X can part the Red Sea, it’s pretty safe to assume that they’re just talking about a good boat.

From Bloom’s product website;

At the heart of every Energy Server™ is Bloom’s patented solid oxide fuel cell technology.

Each Energy Server consists of thousands of Bloom’s fuel cells. Each cell is a flat solid ceramic square made from a common sand-like “powder.”

Each Bloom Energy fuel cell is capable of producing about 25W… enough to power a light bulb. For more power, the cells are sandwiched, along with metal interconnect plates into a fuel cell “stack”. A few stacks, together about the size of a loaf of bread, is enough to power an average home.

In an Energy Server, multiple stacks are aggregated together into a “power module”, and then multiple power modules, along with a common fuel input and electrical output are assembled as a complete system.

The best coverage I’ve found so far comes from The Oil Drum, a peak-energy focused blog.  The discussion in the comments are pretty in-depth and cover the less-than-magic aspects of this new technology very well.

Really, if you’re interested in this topic, check out the comments at The Oil Drum for a good solid perspective from some very smart people.

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