Comment by dolphin0

1 day ago

Next step, use the energy?

This is never going to be economical.

Lightning is ~5GJ per strike. That means you'd need ~4 lighning strikes per hour just to keep up with a single large offshore wind turbine (15MW with 40% capacity factor).

There is also no realistic way to scale the whole thing up to significant levels of power; with the wind turbines, you just build several hundred to get into the GW range. There's simply not enough lighning to achieve that.

And the whole power buffering infrastructure that you would need would be an underutilized waste of (expensive) components.

There's never been any serious attempt at harvesting lightning at scale because a single glance at the numbers reveals how (economically) pointless an exercise it is.

Yes, thanks for repeating the content from the article.

"In addition, we aim to not only trigger and control lightning, but also to harness its energy. Future efforts will focus on developing technologies for capturing and storing lightning energy for potential use (Figure 7)."

  • isn't conventional wisdom that this is "impossible" because you cannot charge batteries that fast?

    • Like most things, you’d probably end up heating water somehow and using that energy.

    • If the energy is going into batteries. It doesn’t necessarily have to.

      Also, technology continues to improve, and this isn’t a “next year” thing.

      2 replies →