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Uncategorized Friday, August 12th 2011 at 12:43 pm

8 Grams of Thorium Could Power a Car For a Lifetime

Nuclear powered cars aren’t exactly a new idea, designers have been fantasizing about them for decades. However, recent research by Charles Stevens, head of Laser Power Systems, suggests that it may be far more possible than previously imagined. The problem Stevens was setting out to solve was bigger than “getting off gas” but rather, the problem of having to fuel cars at all. He believes that 8 grams of the rare-earth mineral thorium, lasers, and mini-turbines could solve that problem by providing the equivalent of 60,000 gallons of gasoline, enough to take a Hummer 960,000 miles, all with no emissions.

Granted, thorium is radioactive, which screams “dangerous” to many people, but it is a lot safer than, say, uranium. According to Stevens, its radioactivity could be easily confined with aluminum foil. The bigger hurdles with the technology hardly involve radioactivity at all: While there are 440,000 tons of thorium in the U.S. alone, no one has really set up any facilities for the purpose of mining it out. That may have to change.

The other issue — a frustratingly practical one — is the matter of making the turbines small enough to fit comfortably in the car and still provide sufficient energy to keep it moving. Still, Stevens expects that he can have a prototype by 2014.

The move from gasoline to hybrid, electric, and ethanol is going pretty slowly at the moment, and one large reason (besides price) is the comparative inconvenience of some of those technologies. Getting your ethanol or having your battery charged can be a lot more annoying than getting gas, and if you have a hybrid it’s not any harder, but it still isn’t any easier. Stevens’ technology could prove to be a game changer because not only is it greener, but you would never have to pay for fuel of any sort ever again and that’s a huge selling point from an economic and convenience perspective.

I’m getting carried away here though. The fact of the matter is that if this technology does eventually reach prototype stage, there is going to be a lot of “but it’s nuclear” fear; the need for millions of dollars for research and production; a thorium mining infrastructure that needs to be built; and if it ever reached consumers, the cars would doubtless be expensive and experimental and there’s no telling what might go wrong. For the moment though, I’ll just hope that I only have to fantasize about nuclear powered cars for a few more decades.

(via GeekWire)

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  • http://www.facebook.com/SeijinDinger Tom Allmendinger

    Nuclear power is one of the safest sources we have. Yes there have been a few accidents but they pale in comparison to the loss of life from coal or even hydro electric…

    Besides the nerd in me loves the idea of saying that my car is powered by THORium

    Now with the mention of lasers and a turbine, sure the thorium could power the car for its possible life and if stored right the possibility of radioactive contamination after an accident is probably minimal, what is the life expectancy on the rest of the systems needed to power the vehicle with the thorium?

  • Blargh Jones

    http://help-cure-disease-now.blogspot.com/
    http://www.linkedin.com/in/laserturbinepowerThe one who has 1985 listed on the website he created in December ’10? Oh yeah, where can I write a check. I need to invest in this biologist-turned-thorium-turbine expert ASAP.

  • Blargh Jones
  • TripleSteakGuy

    Things like the thorium fuel cycle (not mentioned in this article) would be the best next step in nuclear power, except for the fact that it is very difficult to make nuclear weapons from it.  For that reason, it will never become pervasive.

  • http://www.thechildhealthsite.com/clickToGive/home.faces?siteId=1 Edcedc8

    thorium is so much safer than uranium, it can’t cause a meltdown because it dissolves in water.

  • Anonymous

    tinyurl.com/2df4ccp

  • Anonymous

    tinyurl.com/297sxrk

  • Bosch4k

    I’ve seen this all over the web. Am I the only one that see’s a troll here? Where does the energy COME from?? Your using a battery to supply electricity to run a laser to heat a thorium rock to boil steam to run a turbine to (probably) run a generator to run an electric car? 

    You’d be lucky to recover 2% of the energy you started with! How is that better than using the battery to run the electric car straight-up? Where’s the energy gain coming from? They discount radioactivity as the source. You’re so focused on “marketing and technical issues” you’ve failed to see this as a perpetual motion machine in modern disguise. 

  • KoKo the Talking Ape.

    I did some searching, and I can’t find anything that describes how you get a net energy gain. There are some “uranium-seed” designs for nuclear reactors that use radiation from uranium to start a nuclear chain reaction in thorium, and perhaps a laser could do the same thing, But there is no science that I can find that says that is possible, and many people are calling the entire thing a fraud, or very speculative at best. The Laser Power Systems website is clunky and notably short on technical details. It seems focused on getting investor support. I would call their claims definitely far-fetched and probably not news-worthy.

  • Ukiejohn

    Did you know that the US government/NASA  found Thorium on the Moon in 1969…….enought to power everything on earth for 1,000′s of years or more……This is how we knew to look for it here on Earth…..This is just the tip of the iceberg…..Only wish this would stop all the crazy’s in the middle east. Not to have a reason to keep causing war’s. 

  • DigitalMensaDude

    “IF” one day we are able to circulate with fuels, expect to pay HUGE driving taxes… I can’t remember now but some large city, I think London, makes people pay a special tax just to drive in that city… cuts down the number of cars in the city… well if the governments can’t profit off the taxes from fossil fuels they WILL get it from somewhere else… France taxes it’s fuels at around 60%, all occidental countries would instantly go bankrupt, so the dream of getting in your car and just driving, wind in your hair carefree, don’t count on it…

  • JustMe

    The thorium releases more energy than the laser puts in to it… because it’s radioactive.

  • Itsablizzard

    Why not use kickstarter?

  • Celidus

    The Chevy Volt is $40,000.00 how much do you think this thing will cost… remember you have to make up ALL the money lost by big oil on this, because if you don’t they’ll never let it happen.

  • ratkinson

    Thorium is currently re-buried as a waste product during “rare earth” mining, so a mining infrastructure already exists. If the technical hurdles of size, weight and cost can be overcome, this technology could also turn a waste product into a profit center for mining companies while removing the waste from the environment. Sounds like a good solution for everyone.