Microgenerators Coming Soon to Electronics Near You 254
fygment writes "A new microgenerator developed at Georgia
Tech can now produce enough power to run a small electronic device, like a cell phone, and may soon be able to power a laptop. The microgenerator is about 10 millimeters wide, or about the size of a dime. When coupled with a similarly sized gas-fueled microturbine (or jet) engine, the system, called a microengine, has the potential to deliver more energy and last 10 times longer than a conventional battery. This is still just a quarter of the problem. A turbine
is still being developed to turn the generator and that will require fuel and storage of some kind."
No thanks. (Score:3, Interesting)
And the hot exhaust from the turbine would feel absolutely lovely against one's leg while being carried in a pocket.
Somehow I don't see this miniature jet engine concept really "taking off" (hur hur).
Re:No thanks. (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:No thanks. (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:No thanks. (Score:2)
I'd rather burn American coal than buy Arab oil.
From Grandparent post INCREASE our dependency on fossil fuels
The post I replied to doesn't make the distinction between the two, either way the power is coming from a non-renewable source. Though the mini gas turbine is likely to be more efficent.
Re:No thanks. (Score:5, Insightful)
There's a good chance that's Chinese coal you're burning.
I'd be most interested in these generators if they ran on vegetable oil. Large areas of South America (especially Brasil) have been using vegetable oil as a major fuel source (especially in the automotive arena) for some time. I'd rather plant sunflowers or corn than drill oil wells.
Stephen
Re:No thanks. (Score:2, Informative)
Re:No thanks. (Score:2, Insightful)
Agreed. Burning biofuel has zero carbon dioxide release net - it would have decomposed anyway and we're just harnessing the energy released. Burning fossil fuels on the other hand releases CO2 locked up ages ago and so is fucking things up.
Anyway it's all a bit irrelevant from an environmental point of view. We might as well accept that _all_ the fossil fuels reserves will be burnt sooner or later. Only when the reserves get low will prices get push
Re:Not vegetable oil (Score:2)
I remember reading an article about vegetable oil being used (mainly for trucks, buses and other larger vehicles). I've also read about ethanol bewing used (mainly for cars and other smaller vehicles). If these micreogenerators could run on ethanol (presumably in the form of methylated spirit) then that would be good.
Stephen
Re:No thanks. (Score:2)
Re:No thanks. (Score:2)
Re:No thanks. (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:No thanks. (Score:2)
Battery Recalls x 10^3 (Score:2)
They already do, methanol from Home Depot. Alcohol in the form of a fifth of vodka. And lighter fluid is sold in containers of lighter fluid in drug stores everywhere.
Methanol, ethanol, butane or naptha. Any one of them, with appropiate air/fuel mixture and adjustments to compression pressures, would probably fuel it quite well.
Problem, though. Control of temperatures, pressurized gases, liquids, etc. would probably (conservatively) be 100 times more difficult than current (as in, contemporary, not in te
Re:No thanks. (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:No thanks. (Score:2)
I can just see it now...I'm pouring fuel into my laptop and all of the sudden I have a pint of unleaded all over my keyboard. If my keyboard doesn't like soda, imagine how it is going to react to some kind of fuel.
And an aerosal type refill is crap, I have never seen one of those refills work more than a few times without getting jammed or broken or something.
I think this is a cool idea, but I think I will stick to solid state (more or less) when choosing my pow
Re:No thanks. (Score:2)
Re:No thanks. (Score:4, Funny)
Mmmmm - ethanol.
Re:No thanks. (Score:3, Insightful)
It *IS* fossil fuel.
There are other processes for making the hydrocarbons, but they require a LOT more energy input than refining natural gas.
And natural gas is too damn' valuable as a chemical process feedstock to waste it in a fricking fire!
Re:No thanks. (Score:2)
I live near a refinery and more often than not they have a 50 foot pillar of flame coming off one or another of their towers. If it's so valuable, why are they just burning it? :-) I don't know how often I've thought, "Man, if they'd just pipe that stuff to my furnace, I'd never be cold again!".
Seriously, though, if they can make "micro"-generators that are going to be efficient and cheap enough to r
Re:No thanks. (Score:5, Funny)
Who says the turbine has to be powered by fossil fuel? It could be a hydro turbine with penstock attached to your dick. Or perhaps methane powered with a hose stuffed in your ass. Vegans are known for producing copious quantities of methane [counterpoint-music.com].
.Other methane sources include your composting latrine [mtu.edu], port to cows stomach [nyud.net], and even composting of dead cats [amazon.com]
.
Re:No thanks. (Score:5, Informative)
On your fears of hot exhaust:
My cell phone = 3.6v battery @ 850 mah.
That is 3.06 watt hours.
If I talk non-stop on my phone it takes two hours to kill the battery.
That's 1.53 watts consumed at FULL usage.
1.53 watt hours = 1,316 calories.
That's enough heat to raise 1.3 Liters of water one stinkin' degree - over the course of one hour.
I'm willing to be your thigh contains more than 1.3 Liters of water.
Assume 33% efficiency and you still don't have much to fear.
Re:No thanks. (Score:2)
Re:No thanks. (Score:5, Interesting)
Factoring in the other energy used to produce the crop (such as powering tractors, transporting it etc) can be quite complicated and will no doubt slightly offset the advantages but overall I seem to recall that it isn't a bad trade off.
Re:No thanks. (Score:2)
Re:No thanks. (Score:3, Funny)
[Sigh]
Do I have to all the thinking round here? Just turn the turbine with an electric motor running off a battery.
Steam? (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Steam? (Score:2, Funny)
Virtually everything is "steam" powered! (Score:5, Informative)
A nuclear plant is nothing but a fancy way of boiling water to turn, you guessed it, steam turbines to generate electricity. Same with gas and oil-fired power plants.
Re:Virtually everything is "steam" powered! (Score:2)
Re:Virtually everything is "steam" powered! (Score:2, Interesting)
The same thing as any other power plant.
Steam leaks.
At least it is according to the 45min OSHA video and 30min Plant Safety video I had to sit through in order to set foot on the site to do work.
Size (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Size (Score:3, Funny)
or 0.01 meters as we say in science
Re:Size (Score:3, Insightful)
10 mm = within the range of 9.5000 to 10.499999 mm 1 cm = within the range of 0.5000 to 1.49999 cm
Re:Size (Score:5, Informative)
mm = + or - 0.5 mm
cm = + or - 0.5 cm
The other way to do it is with significant figures.
10.0 cm would be (ostensibly) the same thing as
10mm.
Re:Size (Score:3, Informative)
Beaten to the punch! (Score:2)
Re:Size (Score:3, Informative)
A meter is a device you use for measuring things.
A metre is a measurement of distance
Re:Size (Score:2)
metremeter, metermetre, metermeter, metremetre (Score:3, Funny)
A metermetre is a metre within the precision (and accuracy) of the meter that was used to measure the metre.
A metermeter is a device used to measure meters in units unknown.
A metremetre is a square with area of 1 metre in length on each side. A metremetremetre would be used for cubes.
Thank you.
Re:metremeter, metermetre, metermeter, metremetre (Score:2)
Re:metremeter, metermetre, metermeter, metremetre (Score:2)
Already slashdotted. (Score:4, Informative)
The Cache of the magazine [66.102.7.104]
The cache of the gatech site [google.com]
pointless? (Score:2, Interesting)
Enlighten me please!
Re:pointless? (Score:2)
This explains those new Energizer commercials.... (Score:4, Funny)
You know, the one where the guy is chasing his MP3 player down the street. I didn't realize that they were turbine Energizer batteries. Duh!
EricSee your HTTP headers here [ericgiguere.com]
Don't drop it (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Don't drop it (Score:4, Funny)
Now you might be asking yourself: Did he play five hours of music or six? .."
Re:Don't drop it (Score:2)
Basically, when was the last time you saw a dropped lighter explode? And they have a much flimsier construction than electronic devices r
Re:Don't drop it (Score:2)
what's next? (Score:2, Funny)
Re:what's next? (Score:2)
Oh yeah! (Score:2)
Google Cache for broken microturbine link (Score:2)
Forget powering laptops (Score:2)
Re:Forget powering laptops (Score:2)
p.s. did you know there are sequels? 2 of em?
It's the size of a dime... (Score:2, Funny)
The big pix cached... (Score:2)
Ga Tech
tdh42134.jpg [nyud.net]
Thermoelectric generators... (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Thermoelectric generators... (Score:3, Informative)
It was easier in the old days, when computers were a lot bigger. Commercial Information Corporation of Woburn MA used to heat their building in winter with the waste heat from their Xerox Sigm
Re:Thermoelectric generators... (Score:2)
Re:Thermoelectric generators... (Score:2)
Re:Uh. No. (Score:2)
Re:Thermoelectric generators... (Score:2)
They wouldn't accept it, but for a different reason. There's too much prior art in all the perpetual motion machines that have been patented...
The perfect "turbine" is... (Score:5, Funny)
Think outside the box. You've got a 10mm generator, but no way to turn it...
Hamsters! They're cheap and portable. They're a renewable resource. They generate very little excess heat. Their fuel source is available almost anywhere, is non-toxic, and doesn't explode.
Just picture it, the whole world over, millions of laptops, and on top of each screen a hamster in a cage. This is the face of technological improvement.
Re:The perfect "turbine" is... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:The perfect "turbine" is... (Score:2, Funny)
personal safety (Score:2, Funny)
Related Article (Score:4, Informative)
1/Thermal efficiency means 3X hotter laptops (Score:3, Insightful)
Of course, the invention will work very well with better designed hardware and software. Anyone who thinks they need more than 500 MHz processor for most applications (and more than 50 MHz for basic office applications) is either playing games or using bloatware.
and the noise... (Score:2)
Fuel check: go
Ignition: GO!
fffffffwwwiiiiiiiiiiiiiwwwwwrrrrrrroooOOOOOOOAAAA
Please type Ctl Alt Del or insert your smartcard.
(At least we won't be able to hear this annoying sound when windws boots.)
Re:1/Thermal efficiency means 3X hotter laptops (Score:2)
Either your maths has gone a bit screwy or you have some unstated assumptions.
Suppose it's 33% efficient - that means 67% is dissipated as heat (let's assume it's all dissipated as heat).
For it to be three times warmer, that means that batteries must dissipate one third the amount of heat (or roughly 22%), which means that you're assuming batteries are 78% effici
Re:1/Thermal efficiency means 3X hotter laptops (Score:2)
With a regular laptop, the battery is close to 100% efficient, and therefore it will dissipate only a third of the energy of the 33% efficient turbine-powered laptop.
Re:To be fair to the Luddite (Score:2)
He might have a point tho'. I remember running WordPerfect 5.2 under Windows 3.1 and DOS 5 on a 386SX 25MHz and I remember it running a heck of a lot faster than Word 2000 under Windows 2000 on the 1.2GHz on my desk right now.
Assuming that the code would even run on contemporary processors (as I recall it was 16 bit code, should still run I would have thought, drivers are likely to be the problem) and I could find the installation disks (less likely, I've moved house 5 times since then), it would be inter
The beginnings of distributed power? (Score:3, Insightful)
One of the advantages of decentralization is you no longer have big juicy targets for terrorists - who'd attack a neighborhood-size solar station or fuel cell stack? And if they did, the damage would be limited in scope.
This would be great.. (Score:2)
If only planes had windows...
Re:This would be great.. (Score:2)
More Links to Slashdot (Score:4, Informative)
Space Daily [spacedaily.com]
GaTech [gatech.edu]
A Student's description [gatech.edu]
Tech Specs (Score:3, Interesting)
Consumers, industry, and the military are all demanding smaller power supplies for smaller and more pervasive electronic devices. Researchers at the National University of Singapore and California State Polytechnic University (Pomona) recently developed a microgenerator to meet these needs. As long as hydrogen and air are fed into it, the 1-cm3 device generates 4.5 W.
Previous proposals for microgenerators attempted to scale down existing generator designs, but their moving parts made them difficult to manufacture. The team's proposal dispenses with moving parts entirely. The new design radiates heat obtained from hydrogen combustion. A selective emitter focuses the radiation into a small range of wavelengths, and a photovoltaic converter subsequently turns the radiation into electricity.
A hamster in a wheel? (Score:5, Funny)
Just imagine:
Re:A hamster in a wheel? (Score:3, Funny)
Tiny Engines (Score:4, Informative)
Minijets (Score:2, Funny)
This gives me visions of a jumbojet with the whole wingspan covered in thousands of really small jet engines.
New Fragging Concept (Score:2)
I predict a wave of guys getting nailed by buses because they're totally focused on their Gameboys, and having an entire city block nuked when the jet fuel tank on the guy's back goes up in flames as a result...
self-winding? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:self-winding? (Score:2)
Re:self-winding? (Score:2)
Where are the tree huggers? (Score:2, Insightful)
And we tell ourselves that we're be
The Law of Scale (Score:2, Informative)
Re:The Law of Scale (Score:3, Informative)
While I'd quibble with the OP's numbers, the general thrust is correct - efficiency does take a big dive when a combustion engine is scaled down. Gas turbines are more affected by scaling than reciprocating engines - the smallest model aircraft engines are on the order of 0.2cc and the largest diesel engines have several cubic meter displacement per cylinder.
The OP had mixed up flow regimes - the microturbines wo
Fuel cells? (Score:2)
This WARNING label on gaming notebooks recommends: (Score:5, Funny)
C'mon, you lardasses (Score:2, Interesting)
You want to listen to your iPod? Hook it up to your bike!
I wear my iPod when I'm on my bike. Imagine how much cooler it would be if it didn't neeed a battery...
Why not build a proof of concept? (Score:2)
Why not mini-Stirling engines? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Why not mini-Stirling engines? (Score:3, Informative)
Quite efficient, Stirlings.. The Aussies are using two to drive a unmanned station down in Antarctica. Pricey tho.. 10,000 AU$ each for a pair of 1500w units.
Radio Runs On Free Energy (Score:2, Interesting)
You take a crystal radio, tune it to a strong AM station, run the output not to a loudspeaker but to a rectifier, then use that to power a transistor radio which you can tune to any station.
Viola! Free energy!
Re:Metric system 101 (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Metric system 101 (Score:2)
Except in France, because France never bothered with feet and inches: they went straight from saying "about yay big" {or more probably "environ tellement grand"} to the metre, originally defined as the length of a pendulum which takes one seco
Re:Metric system 101 (Score:2)
1 barleycorn = 1/3 inch
1 inch = 3 barleycorns
1 foot = 12 inches
1 yard = 3 feet
1 rod, pole or perch = 5½ yards
1 chain = 4 poles
1 furlong = 10 chains
1 mile = 8 furlongs
1 league = 3 miles
Now isn't that much better?
Re:Powers of ten (Score:2)
There's a 10^2 prefix, too - hecto - but you don't hear that one too much for the same reason.