Years ago, I remember reading about supercapacitor electrodes made from what would be waste hemp bast fiber. They used graphene as a control. And IIRC, the natural branching structure in hemp (the strongest natural fiber) was considered ideal for an electrode.
"Hemp Carbon Makes Supercapacitors Superfast" https://www.asme.org/topics-resources/content/hemp-carbon-ma...
How do the costs and performance compare? Graphene, hemp, durian, jackfruit
While graphene production costs have fallen due to lots of recent research, IIUC all graphene production is hazardous due to graphene's ability to cross the lungs and the blood-brain barrier?
It's hilarious.
They have these material science level arguments about hemp, yet the same people would be hard pressed to find an alternative use for cotton aside from clothes, or wood pulp aside from ikea furniture.
It's a desert topping, it's a driveway sealant. And the government won't let us have it!
AFAIU, when they blend hemp with e.g. rayon it's good enough for underwear, sheets, scrubs.
The government is getting the heck out of the way of hemp, a great rotation crop that can be used for soul remediation.
___tech_thing___ FROM ___mundane_trash___ PRODUCES ___space_magic_thing___!
If you take a charged parallel plate capacitor and pull the plates farther apart does the energy in the system go up or down?
The equations seem to be geared to how distance affects how much you can charge a capacitor. But if it’s already holding a given charge, I don’t think the basic equation applies.
That extra energy is coming from your mechanic effort of separating two plates that attract each other.
What’s the limit? What happens 1 meter apart? 20 meters?
Is the Jackfruit and Durian selected because its spongy properties after being autoclaved?