Starglider wrote:Even if silver cost the same as copper, it would still be entirely pointless. Silver is more dense than copper; the difference in density is greater than the difference in resistivity, so silver cables would be heavier and require more expensive pylons. Silver is also less flexible, considerably weaker, more susceptible to thermal stress (because it expands more) and almost as vulnerable to corrosion.
OK. You're right; I forgot to take those factors into account.
So my example of "copper versus silver" is profoundly flawed, because of other material properties of silver besides conductivity.
However, the
actual point my example was meant to illustrate is not profoundly flawed. Imagine, instead of using silver, that we invent some technomagical way of "treating" copper that increases its conductivity by 10% without changing any of its other physical properties. However, the cost of "treated copper" is ten times greater than the cost of the copper itself.
No one is going to replace the power grid of normal copper with treated copper any time soon under those conditions; it won't pay to do so. The improvement in performance* doesn't justify the cost increase. Industry is not being irrational in refusing to tear down the many thousands (millions?) of miles of copper wire in the country and replace them with "treated copper." Nor is it somehow wrong for makers of electrical cable to continue making untreated copper cable for most applications. Except in very unusual cases, the superior conductivity of "treated copper" is completely irrelevant.
*Which, in this
purely hypothetical scenario, would actually exist, unlike the case of "silver versus copper..."
The whole 'silver wiring is better than copper wiring' meme is an idiotic brainbug perpetuated by idiot 'audiophiles' (and the companies who like to rip them off).
In my case, it comes from reading a table of conductivity values for various metals; I am neither an audiophile nor a manufacturer of audio equipment. I you are specifically angry at those guys, please point your anger elsewhere, because they're not here.
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No, we wouldn't, and you obviously don't know what you're talking about. Hint; critical applications such as satellites and military aircraft could easily afford silver wire, but they use copper or aluminium, because those are technically better materials.
Yes, you're right. I neglected to look up properties of the two metals besides their conductivity, which was a mistake. I was wrong to assert that silver would replace copper if the two had equal costs.
However, even so, I think that my original point (which the "copper versus silver" thing was merely a bad example of) is sound. Marginally greater quality at vastly higher cost does not justify an industry-wide switch, which is why we may not be seeing chip manufacturers switch away from silicon any time soon, even if this new material is better.
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Silver is about 5% better at transmitting power than copper on a per-volume basis and considerably worse on a per-weight basis. Superconductors are infinitely better, in resistivity terms; they are in an entirely different class. Your analogy between silver wire and superconducting wire is worse than useless because superconducting wire is worthwhile in principle and silver wire is not.
And yet, superconducting wire is still so much more expensive that its "infinitely better" resistivity is useless except for specialized scientific applications where you absolutely positively
need the highest possible currents.
So to hell with silver wire; we still have the more fundamental issue of cost-benefit analysis. Nobody builds refrigerated power lines of liquid-nitrogen superconductors for very good reasons, even though those lines could carry electrical power with vastly less waste than the existing copper ones.