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    Tiny block of thorium could power your car forever

    Thorium-powered car technology eliminates need to refuel

    Range is a huge concern for anyone driving an electric vehicle. The fear of running out of juice with no means to recharge is very real as charging stations aren't exactly common. A zero-emission car technology currently being developed by Connecticut-based company, Laser Power Systems, completely eradicates this concern. In fact, if the technology ever takes off, you might never have to refuel again.

    So what is Laser Power Systems' fuel of choice, exactly? It's a heavy-metal element called thorium. And according to the company, eight grams of the silvery metal is enough to power a car throughout its lifespan. Included in the set-up needed to run the car is a laser that heats the thorium. The heat surges produced by the element create steam from the water within a mini-turbine, providing the energy needed to run the car.

    Unfortunately, tapping into thorium as an energy source wouldn't be easy. The element is plentiful enough — the United States has an estimated reserve of 440,000 tons of thorium. But no large-scale facilities dedicated to mining thorium exist, and it would take a lot of money to establish mining operations. Also, thorium is a nuclear power source like uranium, and that could raise some concerns. It's worth noting, though, that the element exhibits little radioactivity. So little, that it can be contained easily by something as ordinary as aluminum foil.

    While the technology sounds promising, it's clearly in its infancy and we're bound to wait for quite some time before we see results. Larger issues like where to get the thorium aside, Laser Power Systems still has to work on a turbine small enough to fit under a car's hood, but powerful enough to run the vehicle. The company's CEO wants you to mark your calendars, though — he expects to have a prototype out by 2014.

    [Image source: Wikimedia Commons]

    (Source)

    Post by Mariella Moon

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    284 comments

    • R E D O X  •  9 mths ago
      LOL... what powers the Laser ??? and since when does heating thorium produce what I assume is a Nuclear reaction to give an energy surplus. Pull my finger and I'll show you a real power source !
      • J 9 mths ago
        you realize that there are thorium-based nuclear plants that power entire cities, right? Well... you probably don't, but there are. And thorium is gaining wider acceptance since it's more stable than uranium and leaves a fraction of the nuclear waste.
      • Michael P 9 mths ago
        sometimes I like to pull my own finger
      • R E D O X 9 mths ago
        @ J oops I'm a Scientist sooo. here's the lecture...Thorium 232 was last used in a Molten Salt reactor program for breeding U233 from Thorium 232 the last experiment being in 1969. There are Plans on the books in several nations and the idea is not only workable but less prone to bomb makers than U fission systems. My next door neighbor is a N engineer and we have casually talked this over. It will not be available as a working technology for power production for a couple of decades. Sorry, there are No ( to our knowledge) working reactors these days and there never were under the MSR program. The Thorium, I believe, was a feed stock for conversion to U233 only and was never intended as a energy generating element in the designs. The Info is old and I am not privy to all the technical details. your last points are in part correct but I think a trip to Wiki would be advisable. At least you are interested and that is a a great advance over most of today's students. thanks for the opinion.
        @ Michael...I have a 5 year old boy... I showed him the experimental repercussions of bio hydrogen last week LOL...PS do'nt stop till the neighbors come a knockin'... Bush used to talk about the Hydrogen economy...LOL. A PhD I worked with years ago (organic synth) told me a story about a frat party gone wrong where one brother lit his ' windy emission' of Hydrogen and suffered 'blowback' and ended in the ER , he was admitted for 'internal burns'...ouch.
    • Qlippoth  •  9 mths ago
      perpetual motion anybody?
      • Joshua 9 mths ago
        Its not PE, the lifetime of a car is finite, and therefore it implies that the fuel source is meant for the lifetime of the car, not for eternity.
      • A Yahoo! User 9 mths ago
        Yes, it is a perpetual motion machine. It's just dressed up to fool the rubes.
      • javan p 9 mths ago
        The concept of a perpetual motion machine is that it operates over 100% efficiency, meaning that it's energy output is greater than its energy input. Since this material is the energy source, it is not a perpetual motion machine.
    • Anonymous  •  9 mths ago
      Mining Thorium is so tedious, but not as tedious as Mithril.
      • Mike 9 mths ago
        Oye, but what about Khorium, that stuff is so rare!
      • ConcernedCitizen 9 mths ago
        Really?
      • Amy 9 mths ago
        LOTR mithril, or WOW mithril?
    • TonyA  •  9 mths ago
      Don't hold your breath...
    • Ichibon  •  9 mths ago
      We'll never see this car. The entire auto industry and oil companies will buy the technology and shelve it. The auto companies will not want to invest in retooling to produce this car and the oil companies will wait until the last drop of oil is pumped out of the ground before they give up.
      • JohnG 9 mths ago
        They all need an incentive. Let's figure it out.
    • Libs is Dumb  •  9 mths ago
      I like thorium.
    • John  •  9 mths ago
      This is pure crap. Quantum woo so to say...
    • A Yahoo! User  •  9 mths ago
      The question always is 'Great, it's clean burning, but how do you power it and how does THAT pollute?'
      • Jesse 9 mths ago
        Alex, it states in the article that a laser heats the Thorium, which in turn heats water in a steam driven turbine that powers the drivetrain. Since there's no polutants in this wholly contained system, it should be clean.
      • gg 9 mths ago
        So why the Thorium just heat the water with the laser???
    • The Chosen  •  9 mths ago
      Isn't there a way to transform heat into electricity without resorting to mechanical processes?
    • Damascus  •  9 mths ago
      Perhaps for now they should consider using the thorium to generate steady state electrical charging in a vehicle rather than using it to power the vehicle until the technology evolves to a higher level.
    • ConcernedCitizen  •  9 mths ago
      Is everyone finally getting over their fears of radioactivity so we can start using nuclear power? Nuclear power is the most cost effective power technology, after coal power plants, and has been proven over 50 years of use. Coal power plants are estimated to kill hundreds of thousands of people in the US alone, while nuclear has had only one major accident.
    • HannoR  •  9 mths ago
      What kind of nonsense is this? The reporter apparently slept through physics classes in high school. Shows the state of education in this country; creates great opportunities for snake oil sales men, though.
    • Noobpoleone Blownaprte  •  9 mths ago
      Isn't Thorium what they were mining on Mars in " Total Recall " ? Science Fiction becoming Science Fact yet again.
    • milwaukee 55  •  9 mths ago
      well if it is good for us and the enviroment, thats great a real step foward. big oil will put a stop to that nonsense.
    • Gogaz  •  9 mths ago
      #$%$ any attempt to use alternative fuel will always be thwarted by the oil companies and their butt buddies in the auto industry. it's a bunch of .#$%$ we will use oil until it's depleted or till we are depleted and all the patents that the companies have for alternative fuel will surface. anytime someone has an alternative way it's shoot down and bought out.
    • kr  •  9 mths ago
      sounds good but where does the power for the lasers come from?
    • Preston  •  9 mths ago
      It is about time for a new source of enegry to propell an automobile. But guess what people the oil companies won't let it happen. They will buy the patents on the power generators and block their production as they have done in the past. Or maybe they will put a lock on all of the thorium deposits and guess what the 5 ounces of thorium will cost you $50,000.00 to power your car.
    • Herbert  •  9 mths ago
      Big oil and coal will crush anything as sensible as this. Just like they're crushing maglev transportation.
    • Champ  •  9 mths ago
      This wont go anywhere just like hydrogen powered cars are nowhere to be found. As long as big oil owns the GOP we will always be tied to oil.
    • Mary  •  9 mths ago
      Bring it on! With 440,000 tons already stockpiled, there's absolutely no reason (other than big oil & coal politics) not to start employing thorium right now. And James has the right of it, start with power plants.... It could replace coal, natural gas AND nuclear (which, btw, I've got no prob with)

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