Ottawa Citizen

NEW TECHNOLOGI­ES COULD SPARK CHANGE

Intelligen­t automotive innovation is not just for electric cars, writes David Booth.

- Driving.ca

With our laser-like focus on electric vehicles and cars that drive themselves, it’s easy to forget that innovation comes in many forms. No stranger to the “now why didn’t I think of that?” self-recriminat­ion, Motor Mouth looks at some head-smackingly obvious inventions I wish I had thought of.

LIGHTWEIGH­T METHOD TO REDUCE CARBON DIOXIDE

This one may be old but is still so painfully obvious that one feels literally moronic as soon as you read the abstract. To wit: We have too much carbon dioxide, but we don’t have anywhere near enough carbon fibre so why not create one from the other? That’s exactly what some researcher­s at George Washington University have done, developing a methodolog­y to extract carbon fibre from the CO2 in our atmosphere. And guess what the other byproduct of this electroche­mical process is?

Oxygen.

Yes, Stuart Licht, a chemistry professor in Ashburn, Va., claims to have found a way to convert CO2 into pure nanoscale carbonfibr­e filaments and replace it with the oxygen we breathe, thus both purifying the air and producing the lightweigh­t manmade material destined to take over from steel, aluminum and magnesium in the building of our cars.

Not only that, Licht claims that if renewable sources of electricit­y are used, there’s a net reduction in carbon dioxide in the atmosphere, so much so that he estimates that given an area of constant sunshine 1/10th the size of the Sahara Desert, his system could remove enough CO2 to return the global atmosphere back to pre-industrial revolution pureness within 10 years.

Indeed, Licht and his fellow researcher­s claim the process could be applied to coal-fired electricit­y plants that would emit no CO2 at all. Licht et al have formed a startup — C2CNT — that is developing a commercial process for the conversion.

Closer to home, a Calgary company, Carbon Upcycling Technologi­es, has figured out a way to combine CO2 with waste products to create additives for concrete, plastic and batteries.

SAVE A MOTORCYCLI­ST, SPLIT A LANE

This one hits close to home because I am a motorcycli­st and whether it’s legal or not, I have been known to split a lane.

For those not aware of what splitting lanes is, it’s the motorcycli­ng art of squeezing in between two rows of cars so that one might get ahead of the traffic jams caused by “cagers.”

In California, where it’s legal, filtering, as it is sometimes called, can take 30 minutes out of what would otherwise be an hour-long commute.

Of course, there’s the danger that one of the car drivers you’re squeezing by might not see you and change lanes right into your front wheel. Take my word for this, you really don’t want to get knocked off your bike on Los Angeles’ I-405 or Ontario’s Highway 401 for that matter.

Enter Ford’s latest patent for Detection of Lane- Splitting Motorcycle­s.

Essentiall­y, what the Ford system does (or would do if it makes it to production) is use cameras like those in rear cross-traffic alert systems to spot motorcycle­s white-lining. If the car driver tries to switch lanes as the motorcycli­st approaches, the on-board Advanced Driver Assistance Systems (ADAS) — that include such technologi­es as adaptive cruise control and lanedepart­ure assist that you are already familiar with — would automatica­lly prevent steering into his or her path.

According to CNET, this new ability to recognize motorcycli­sts is actually quite important to the future of self-driving because current autonomous systems “have difficulty detecting motorcycli­sts in traffic” and Ford’s patent “could mean a big leap forward for autonomous four-wheeled vehicle and twowheeled vehicle relations.”

CAR WASHES AND SELFDRIVIN­G HARDWARE DON’T GET ALONG

File this one under “who’d a thunk it?” It turns out that, according to a study by the Internatio­nal Carwash Associatio­n (ICA), car washes and the modern computeriz­ed automobile don’t always get along.

For instance — and who hasn’t experience­d this — almost 80 per cent of car wash owners report damage to automatic “rain-sensing ” wipers because they sense, well, a soapy thundersto­rm in the making. Some newfangled transmissi­ons don’t like being dragged through the wash either (they engage their hill- or autohold mechanisms).

More troubling is almost 40 per cent of the associatio­n’s operators have reported problems with ADAS being applied — the collision-avoidance system brakes when it shouldn’t, the lane-departure warning is triggered and more — during the wash cycle.

Even keyless entry systems seem to go haywire when hosed down; almost a quarter of car wash operators received complaints of cars locking themselves while getting scrubbed.

Thankfully, this all comes with a relatively easy solution: The ICA recommends that all automakers simply install a “car wash” button that would deactivate all these Fancy Dan electronic­s.

And as ADAS technology becomes more common, sensors could wirelessly communicat­e with car washes so the computers were automatica­lly deactivate­d.

Of course, we could all just hand wash our own high-tech rides.

AND MORE CARBON DIOXIDE REDUCTION

Synthetic gasoline is not a new idea. The theory behind synthesizi­ng fuel from coal was put forward way back in 1913.

The difference, 105 years later, is that Bosch is trying to accomplish the same task using the carbon dioxide we’re all trying to reduce in the atmosphere. According to Bosch researcher­s, they get their hydrogen from the electrolys­is of water and the carbon from captured CO2. In theory, if renewable energy were used for the entire program, the process could capture and synthesize as much carbon dioxide as is released in the internal combustion process.

As Dr. Volkmar Denner, chairman of Robert Bosch GmbH, said, “Synthetic fuels can make gasoline- and diesel-powered cars carbon neutral.”

Maybe we don’t have to give up on internal combustion engines quite yet.

Author’s note: The carboncapt­ure technologi­es noted above are very much still in their infancy, the CO2-tocarbon-fibre process barely past the theoretica­l stage and synthetic fuel a long way from being commercial­ly viable. Indeed, Audi just announced that, together with Global Bioenergie­s, the company has just created the largest batch of synfuel ever produced — barely 60 litres.

Nonetheles­s, there is a great deal of research into conversion of carbon dioxide into fuel.

 ?? BOSCH/DRIVING.CA ?? Bosch is working on a synthetic fuel using captured CO2 and they hope to make gasoline-powered and diesel-powered cars carbon neutral through synthetic fuels.
BOSCH/DRIVING.CA Bosch is working on a synthetic fuel using captured CO2 and they hope to make gasoline-powered and diesel-powered cars carbon neutral through synthetic fuels.

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