Biomass Electric Battery
Around this time last year a team of engineering students at MIT created an electric battery that would charge using leaves and grass clippings - essentially biomass. The entire project only cost ~$2 because no precious metals were used but the down side is that it would take nearly half a year just to charge a normal cell phone!
While this product isn't all that useful in it's current state, discoveries from small experiments like this will lead to better composting and eventually biomass solutions for the masses. What if your home compost heap with rotten food, banana peals, and yard waste was feeding electricity into your home instead of just stinking up the yard? What if instead of emptying leftovers into the garbage disposal you put them into a biomass electric car? Furthermore, at the very basic level of composting, the end waste could still be used as fertilizer even after peak electricity had been generated using techniques similar to those demonstrated by this MIT team.
Other more recent breakthroughs in Solar technology at MIT are getting us even closer to living in closed loop energy environments.
While this product isn't all that useful in it's current state, discoveries from small experiments like this will lead to better composting and eventually biomass solutions for the masses. What if your home compost heap with rotten food, banana peals, and yard waste was feeding electricity into your home instead of just stinking up the yard? What if instead of emptying leftovers into the garbage disposal you put them into a biomass electric car? Furthermore, at the very basic level of composting, the end waste could still be used as fertilizer even after peak electricity had been generated using techniques similar to those demonstrated by this MIT team.
What is Biodiesel?
Perhaps you've seen it. Perhaps you haven't. A local gas station opens a new pump offering E85 a new, environmentally friendly and renewable fuel source! Naturally, you think of filling up at that pump instead of the usual grades of gas. Word of warning: DON'T DO IT! Unless you're one of the few people driving the right car, called a flex-fuel vehicle, that is.In addition to E85, which is a mixture of 85% ethanol and 15% gasoline, another biofuel is becoming available at some filling stations. It is called 'biodiesel'. Although both E85 and biodiesel are made from biomass, there...Headlines:

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