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Article: CSR project aims to create a high-speed, carbon-neutral steam-powered

Started by ozbob, May 27, 2012, 06:35:07 AM

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ozbob

From gizmag click here!

CSR project aims to create a high-speed, carbon-neutral steam-powered locomotive

QuoteCSR project aims to create a high-speed, carbon-neutral steam-powered locomotive

By Ben Coxworth

13:07 May 24, 2012

You might think that a coal-burning locomotive built in 1937 had nothing left to offer the modern rail industry, short of being a nice museum piece. In the case of Locomotive 3463, however, that appears to be far from true – now in the hands of engineers from the Coalition for Sustainable Rail (CSR), it is set to become the world's first carbon-neutral higher-speed locomotive. It won't be electric, however. Instead, it will run on steam generated by the burning of biocoal.

CSR is a collaboration between the University of Minnesota's Institute on the Environment (IonE) and the nonprofit Sustainable Rail International (SRI). The group's current CSR Project 130 has one goal – to create "the world's cleanest, most powerful passenger locomotive, proving the viability of solid biofuel and modern steam locomotive technology." The "130" in the name comes from the fact that part of the project will involve an attempt at breaking the world record for steam locomotive speed, by pushing the very-overhauled locomotive to at least 130 mph (209 km/h).

Locomotive 3463 was donated to CSR by the Great Overland Station Museum in Topeka, Kansas, in November of last year. While it originally ran on plain old mined-from-the-earth coal, it will be adapted to burn biocoal – a biomass-derived solid fuel with an energy density and handling properties similar to those of coal, but that contains no heavy metals, and produces less ash, smoke and volatile off-gases. Additionally, it's carbon neutral, meaning that it releases no more carbon when being burned than was originally absorbed by the plants that it's made from.

CSR's early research suggests that the test locomotive will be cheaper to fuel and maintain than regular diesel-electric models, while also offering quicker acceleration and better horsepower output at higher speeds ... and, of course, it will run cleaner. If the demonstration project is successful, however, trains could be merely a starting point for biocoal-fueled steam power.

"Once perfected, creating the world's first carbon-neutral locomotive will be just the beginning for this technology which, we hope, will later be used for combined heat and power energy in the developing world as well as reducing the United States' dependence on fossil fuels," said IonE's Rod Larkins.

Sources: University of Minnesota, Coalition for Sustainable Rail
Half baked projects, have long term consequences ...
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ozbob

Half baked projects, have long term consequences ...
Ozbob's Gallery Forum   Facebook  X   Mastodon  BlueSky

SurfRail

They're still going on with this?

Please.  Come back to us when you can run these in series like a DEL and then people might take them seriously.

Electric propulsion is where it's at, whether by overhead supply or onboard generation.
Ride the G:

SurfRail

^ It would be interesting if they could run a steam-electric.  I expect burning diesel would create considerably more energy though, otherwise there would be little reason why it is so prolific.
Ride the G:

somebody

Quote from: SurfRail on May 27, 2012, 19:25:59 PM
^ It would be interesting if they could run a steam-electric.  I expect burning diesel would create considerably more energy though, otherwise there would be little reason why it is so prolific.
That's not really the reason, and even the 8% vs 40% efficiency isn't the whole story.

One person can operate 4 diesel engines, mu'd together.  Perhaps two for some operators, but put 4 steam train engines together and you are likely to have 8 crew.

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