| | Create free blog ( Türkçe , Deutsch , Español )

teknologia

3 "heat" etiketi kullanan gönderi "heat" etiketi kullanan diğer içerikler resimler , videolar

Researchers squeeze more electricity from heat

exhaust

Researchers at Ohio State University have invented a new material that can generate electricity from heat in hot machine environments at an unprecedented rate.

The new material is called thallium-doped lead telluride.

The development could have a direct application for converting car engine exhaust heat into electricity, according to a statement from the university.

Using thermoelectric materials for generating power is not new. It is the group's improvements on this type of alloy that are newsworthy.

The group, led by Joseph Heremans, Ohio Eminent Scholar in Nanotechnology at Ohio State University, developed a material that is effective between 450 and 950 degrees Fahrenheit, the temperature range for most car engines.

"The material does all the work. It produces electrical power just like conventional heat engines--steam, gas, or diesel engines--that are coupled to electrical generators, but it uses electrons as the working fluids instead of water or gases, and makes electricity directly," Heremans said in a statement to the press.

Heremans' group has also more than doubled the efficiency rating with which the previously most efficient thermoelectric material could convert heat into electricity, from 0.71 to 1.5.

The invention's story is also an example of how scientific breakthroughs are really the culmination of many people's efforts over long periods of time.

Heremans credits a breakthrough development published in 2006 by researchers at Michigan State University on the quantum mechanics of thallium and tellurium with directly inspiring him after 10 years to try a new approach to producing this type of material. Testing of the new thermoelectric material was a collaborative effort between Heremans's group and scientists at the California Institute of Technology and Osaka University.

Details on the physics behind how the thallium-doped lead telluride was developed can be found in the journal Science.

via news.cnet 

Heat Me USB Heated Stirrer

heat me

Here’s one of the many problems about corporate jobs. You work in a small cubicle in the middle of a sardine packed high-rise so the coffee machine is no doubt a few minutes away from your small work space. So by the time you get back to your desk after the long trek from the coffee machine, your caffeinated beverage is left luke warm. That’s just no way to live.

The ingenious Heat Me is a great little USB gadget which acts as both a beverage stirrer and a liquid heating device. Just plug the Heat Me into your computers USB port and the metal coil will heat up for optimal coffee heating power.

One thing you should watch out for though is we imagine the Heat Me gets pretty toasty. And unless you have the same sort of Milton-mentality then the character from Office Space, you probably don’t think it’s a great career choice to burn down your building.

As far as we can tell, the Heat Me is no more than a conceptual pipe dream for the time being. Though we’ve seen in the past that the most ingenious ideas often times get scooped up or copied by gadget stores, so here’s hoping that Heat Me gets the credit it’s due. Dammit, my coffee is cold now! Make this damn thing!

via .coolest-gadgets 

ElectraTherm installs first waste heat generato

ElectraTherm installs first waste heat generato

ElectraTherm installs first waste heat generato

CARSON CITY, NEV.: ElectraTherm, Inc. has installed its first commercial waste heat generator, which makes electricity from residual industrial heat that usually goes to waste.


Using patented heat and pressure recovery technology, ElectraTherm employs minimal heat (200 degrees F liquid) to generate fuel-free, emissions-free electricity at low cost: three to four cents per kW/hr during payback period, under a penny/kW hour thereafter.


Testing of the 50kW ElectraTherm Green Machine, installed at Southern Methodist University (SMU) in Dallas, Texas, by Gulf Coast Green Energy and ElectraTherm, has exceeded the companies' expectations, reaching output beyond its 50kW rating.


"ElectraTherm has unlocked the power of recycling the largest source of renewable energy in the U.S. - waste heat," said ElectraTherm CEO Richard Langson. "This technology has the power to increase electrical output at every fossil fuel burning power plant without burning oil, gas or coal, and without further pollution or damage to the environment."

 

According to some government estimates, electricity generated through waste heat recovery could surpass all other renewable sources, given the amount of waste heat generated in the U.S.


ElectraTherm estimates that its units have a subsidy-free payback period of three years or less, and company officials claim "the implications on the world stage of a modular, scalable (50-500kW output) unit making electricity from unused, accessible heat are huge."


The company's patented Twin Screw Expander enables the ElectraTherm Green Machine to do its work. The expander is one-tenth the cost of a turbine as the energy block, according to ElectraTherm. Since the energy block generally constitutes 30 to 40 percent of the cost of an organic Rankine cycle (ORC) system, the ElectraTherm Green Machine will cost approximately 30 percent less than turbine ORC systems.


The unit operates without gearboxes or the high end electronics required to synchronize a turbine to a generator. Inline process lubrication eliminates oil pumps, filters, separator tanks, parasitic loads and maintenance issues usually associated with lubrication. ElectraTherm officials say the technology reduces maintenance and extends the life of the ElectraTherm Green Machine compared to turbine-based energy solutions...

via energycurrent 

 

Sayac Ekle