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Technologically, we can now build a steam plant that works at 40 percent efficiency. We had some of these already in the 1960s. Practically speaking, this means superheating water to over 1,000 degrees Fahrenheit while upping the pressure to an awesome 3,200 pounds per square inch to convert this water straight into dry, unsaturated steam without boiling it. The construction of a machine robust enough to perform this task 24/7 for thirty years has turned out to be both fraught and expensive. The closer a steam plant comes to 40 percent efficiency, the more routine maintenance it needs, the ...more
The Grid: Electrical Infrastructure for a New Era
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