ScienceIQ.com

Can You Drink Too Much Water?

Body fluids account for over 70% of an average adult's body. Our body fluids are composed of water and substances called electrolytes. Dissolved in water, these materials develop tiny electrical charges that stimulate and regulate many of our body functions such as heart rate. Our bodies have several mechanisms for eliminating fluids including ...

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TooMuchWater
Astronomy

Exercising In Space

What did astronaut Shannon Lucid like least about her six months on Space Station Mir? The daily exercise. 'It was just downright hard,' she wrote in Scientific American (May 1998). 'I had to put on a ... Continue reading

ExercisingInSpace
Geology

A Big, Big Wave

A tsunami (pronounced 'soo-nah-mee') is a series of waves of extremely long wave length and long period generated in a body of water by an impulsive disturbance that vertically displaces the water. ... Continue reading

ABigBigWave
Geology

Finding Ice In The Rocks--Evidence Of Earth's Ice Ages

In the late 1700s, geologists began trying to determine how huge boulders of granite weighing several tons could have moved as much as 80 km (50 miles) from their origins in the Swiss Alps. Some ... Continue reading

EarthsIceAges
Mathematics

How To Calculate The Area Of A Right Cone

The cone is another three-dimensional shape based on the circle. You could think of it as the cross between a circle and a right triangle. Its properties will have features of both shapes, and this ... Continue reading

AreaOfARight Cone

Knocking the NOx Out of Coal

KnockingtheNOxOutofCoalNitrogen is the most common part of the air we breathe. In fact, about 80% of the air is nitrogen. Normally, nitrogen atoms float around joined to each other like chemical couples. But when air is heated in a coal boiler's flame, for example these nitrogen atoms break apart and join with oxygen. This forms 'nitrogen oxides' or, as it is sometimes called, 'NOx'. NOx can also be formed from the atoms of nitrogen that are trapped inside coal. In the air, NOx is a pollutant. It can cause smog, the brown haze you sometimes see around big cities. It is also one of the pollutants that forms 'acid rain.' And it can help form something called 'groundlevel ozone,' another type of pollutant that can make the air dingy. NOx can be produced by any fuel that burns hot enough. Automobiles, for example, produce NOx when they burn gasoline. But a lot of NOx comes from coal-burning power plants, so the Clean Coal Technology Program developed new ways to reduce this pollutant.

One of the best ways to reduce NOx is to prevent it from forming in the first place. Scientists have found ways to burn coal (and other fuels) in burners where there is more fuel than air in the hottest combustion chambers. Under these conditions, most of the oxygen in air combines with the fuel, rather than with the nitrogen. The burning mixture is then sent into a second combustion chamber where a similar process is repeated until all the fuel is burned. ,This concept is called 'staged combustion' because coal is burned in stages. A new family of coal burners called 'low-NOx burners' has been developed using this way of burning coal. These burners can reduce the amount of NOx released into the air by more than half. Today, because of research and the Clean Coal Technology Program, more than half of all the large coal-burning boilers in the United States will be using these types of burners.

There is also a family of new technologies that work like 'scubbers' by cleaning NOx from the flue gases (the smoke) of coal burners. Some of these devices use special chemicals called 'catalysts' that break apart the NOx into non-polluting gases. Although these devices are more expensive than 'low-NOx burners,' they can remove up to 90 percent of NOx pollutants. But in the future, there may be an even cleaner way to burn coal in a power plant. Or maybe, there may be a way that doesn't burn the coal at all.