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Volume 9 Issue 5, May 2024

Resilient lines

Hurricane damage leads to power outages and can trigger cascading failures in power grids as they respond to the initial impacts. Stürmer et al. present a dynamic approach to modelling these wind-induced power-line failures that allows them to test the potential effects of line hardening in providing a more resilient power grid.

See Stürmer et al.

Image: Bob Daemmrich / Alamy Stock Photo. Cover design: Thomas Phillips

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  • One of the major challenges in realizing lithium (Li)-metal batteries is the instability of Li metal in the electrolyte. Now, a study unveils the significant role of lithium oxide in protecting Li metal, thereby contributing to stable battery operation.

    • Seongjae Ko
    • Atsuo Yamada
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  • The shift towards low-carbon heating technologies and associated infrastructure often disrupts citizens’ lives. Research now demonstrates how the socio-psychological context may influence the circumstances under which citizens are willing to accept heating transitions and related construction work, and those where reactance and rejection is to be expected.

    • Paula Maria Bögel
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  • The activation barriers of interfacial energy conversion reactions are key to controlling the efficiency of electrolysers. Work on the structural dynamics of water during charge transfer at electrified solid/liquid interfaces now brings greater understanding of the components of the activation barriers for water dissociation and hydrogen evolution.

    • Aleksandar R. Zeradjanin
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  • Pay-as-you-go energy systems are a promising market-based approach to paying for energy in small amounts in sub-Saharan Africa; however, implementation and the suitability of current business models show room for improvement. This Perspective outlines an agenda for more inclusive PAYG systems.

    • Tash Perros
    • Sam Unsworth
    • Julia Tomei
    Perspective
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