What’s your dream car?
Something fast?
Sleek?
Fuel efficient?
Mine is all those, and it runs on saltwater.
Sound ridiculous?
Well my dream car may be closer to reality
than you think.
Hello gearheads and geeks alike, I’m Julian
for DNews and I have a tasty treat for both
of you.
The car is unquestionably one of the most
important inventions ever.
It’s made transportation available to the
masses and independence available to teenagers.
Most of our daily lives aren’t possible
without one.
But the car as we know it has some huge challenges
looming over it in the not-so-distant future.
First there’s the problem of what goes into
it.
Gasoline is an oil product, and oil isn’t
renewable in any way.
It’s a resource that will one day be too
scare to meet demands, and while sources disagree
on when that’s going to be exactly, it’s
likely going to be within my lifetime.
Even if gasoline is replaced with ethanol
from renewable sources, there’s still the
issue of what comes out of the internal combustion
engine: Carbon Dioxide.
CO2 is the most common greenhouse gas and
in the US, 32% of that comes from transportation.
So our cars, while useful, are not sustainable
and are contributing almost a third of the
CO2 that’s destabilizing out climate.
There has to be a better way.
Electric cars look to be that way.
They allow us to still be mobile and independent,
but there are hidden caveats.
Battery powered cars take a long time to charge
when they run out of juice.
Instead of a 5 minute fill up, drained batteries
of electric cars can take one to eight hours,
depending on the kind of car and charging
station.
Fast charging can cut that time to 30 minutes,
but if you do that all the time the battery
could be ruined in three years and replacements
will likely cost thousands.
And don’t forget that that electricity has
to come from somewhere, and in the US, that
somewhere is likely a coal power plant.
Electricity production is the only source
of CO2 bigger than transportation.
But electric motors can be powered by other
means.
Liquid hydrogen, when recombined with oxygen,
can be used to generate an electric current
and the only waste product is dihydrogen monoxide.
More commonly called water.
Hydrogen is the most abundant element in the
universe, so we probably aren’t going to
run out.
And delivering it in liquid form means you
preserve the splash and dash ability gas cars
enjoy.
But to keep hydrogen in a liquid state, it
has to be stored at high pressure.
This raises issues of safety, and we as a
species already have to be reminded not to
light a cigarette at gas stations.
Now however there’s a third option.
German company Nanoflowcell debuted their
QUANT e-sportlimousine at the geneva motor
show this year and it’s goal is to be the
first saltwater powered production car…
in the world.
The QUANT e-sportlimousine has two tanks of
liquids with dissolved metallic salts that
give them opposite charges.
These are pumped through a membrane and the
process of recombining them generates electricity.
Nanoflowcell claims one fill up is good for
over 300 miles.
That’s surprisingly… car-like.
Though the combined volume of the tanks is
over 3 times that of a large SUV, so fill
ups will take longer, but certainly not hours.
And without the hazards of liquid hydrogen
or gasoline.
More than that, the QUANT e-sportlimousine,
despite its ridiculous name, is quite a handsome
thing.
And the company promises performance figures
like 0-60 in 2.8 seconds and a top speed of
over 200 miles per hour.
And best of all, it’s just been approved
for testing on european roads.
Personally, I couldn’t care if it looked
like an ugly christmas sweater and made fun
of my ears; if there’s a car that can run
on saltwater with no emissions, I want one
yesterday.
Cutting edge electronics are awesome in all
forms, and another cool new tech you’ll
probably seeing a lot more of is wireless
charging.
If you want to learn the science behind it,
Trace has you covered with this video here.
What do you think will be the next big transportation
innovation?
Let us know down below.
And don’t forget to subscribe…
I couldn’t think of a rhyme for that one.
Thanks for watching!
