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考研英语阅读部分是冲刺收尾阶段重点复习的大项,历年考研英语都是过线容易高分难,所以同学们要想拿高分务必在最后阶段强化英语阅读“得英语阅读,得天下”,太奇考研英语辅导专家王瑾老师收集整理了历年阅读精选和各建议同学们在距离考试时间还剩四周的时间里每天一篇,快速提高阅读能力。
山珍海味
DIESEL engines are famously unfussy about what they burn in their cylinders. Indeed, Rudolf Diesel’s original design ran on powdered coal. But even he might have been taken aback by the recipe concocted by Peter Ferlow. Mr Ferlow, who lives in a suburb of Vancouver, British Columbia, is one of the leaders of a growing band of enthusiasts who brew their own car fuel. His diesel engine runs on oil collected from the kitchen of a local pub.
The recipe starts by filtering the breadcrumbs out with a mesh screen. After that you warm the oil up and add sodium hydroxide and methanol. The sodium hydroxide (known as “lye”, in the trade) breaks the oil molecules into fatty acids and glycerol. The methanol reacts with the fatty acids to form esters. Drain away the glycerol. Wash the remainder with water to remove impurities and surplus lye. Drain that water. Then aerate what is left with an aquarium bubbler to drive off the last traces of moisture. The result is 175 litres of finest home-brewed biodiesel—enough to drive Mr Ferlow’s pickup truck for 1,200km (750 miles). And the cost, he reckons, is a mere C$45 (about $44, south of the border) plus two hours of his labour. The oil itself is free. Restaurants are glad to give it away, to avoid the cost of disposal.
That may change. According to Miles Phillips, the head of the Cowichan Energy Alternatives Society, based in Duncan, British Columbia, local demand for veggie-oil fuel is already outstripping supply. Moreover, biodiesel made from restaurant oil can be sold for a tidy profit. On the other side of North America, the Baltimore Biodiesel Co-op, in Maryland, says green-minded drivers are prepared to pay a premium of about 30% over the cost of petroleum-based diesel to fill their cars with biodiesel. The co-operative reports that its sales are up by 20% this year. Eventually, presumably, restaurant owners will want a slice of the action, too. At the moment, though, they seem glad to collaborate for nothing. The co-op can rely on an industrial producer—a so-called “grease puller”—driving a lorry around the area’s restaurants to collect its raw material free. And it plans, starting next year, to buy biodiesel from home producers as well.
Some of these producers rely, like Mr Ferlow, on Heath Robinson lash-ups of their own devising to make their motoring equivalent of hooch. Others use off-the-shelf reactors. Oilybits, a British company, will, for £395 ($620), sell you a device that produces batches of 120 litres of biodiesel—and the firm’s owner, Adrian Henson, is modest enough to admit that many other firms do likewise. The process is not particularly hazardous. Biodiesel esters are not so volatile that they form an explosive vapour (which is why they can be used only in diesel engines, not petrol ones), and though the methanol and sodium hydroxide need careful handling (they are unpleasant by themselves, and truly noxious if allowed to react together), so far the health-and-safety authorities in countries where home-brewed biodiesel is taking off have not stepped in to interfere. Even the taxman generally turns a blind eye. In Britain, which once tried to fine people for failing to pay duty on home-brewed fuel, the tax-free manufacture of up to 2,500 litres a year is now permitted.
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