Fervo captures the first test series of a demonstrator of its technology – universal geothermal electrostatic horizontal. On the way to Nevada, he will first overcome 1 km, and the second time he will gain 63 liters. Remove the heat after the smoke in the video for a temperature of 191 ° C, which will cool the electric current and generate 3.4 megawatts of energy.

Such was the case with Tim Latimer, CEO and supplier of Fervo Energy, who adapted the fracturing technology and bureau to harvest heat from the planet’s interior. In classical geothermal rooms, the windows are covered by a sloping ceiling. But its volume and pressure are too small, so 40% of such facilities appear to be frozen at the construction stage. It was 0.5% geothermal.

geothermal room

The Fervo method is based on laying several long horizontal wells at shallow depths. A liquid is pumped into them under pressure, which leads to hydraulic fracturing of the rocks around. A “spot” is formed with the detection of cracks in the heated rock, where water is absorbed, and after heating and turning into steam, it is pumped out through alternative wells. This approach allows you to collect much more steam, while reducing the number of drilling operations at depth.

In 2020, Latimer’s time was chosen by the University of Texas students against Austin, which is what planned to increase the capacity of their geothermal baths to 200 megawatts, and from there to 2 gigawatts. It’s a practical place anywhere on the planet, and it’s not too big, the same temple could be close to oversight. Investor saw Latimera idea where it was worth $187 million at the time of implementation projects.

Source: Tech Cult

Previous articleOtkritie Bank launched a non-monetary tipping service
Next articleBlizzard comments on scandalous update for Diablo 4Games12:08 | 22 July 2023
I am a professional journalist and content creator with extensive experience writing for news websites. I currently work as an author at Gadget Onus, where I specialize in covering hot news topics. My written pieces have been published on some of the biggest media outlets around the world, including The Guardian and BBC News.

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here