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University of Utah physicist Orest Symko holds a match to a small heat engine that produces a high-pitched tone by converting heat into sound.
Tiny "screaming machines" could stretch battery life in laptops

A U.S. Army-funded research project at the University of Utah has resulted in a crop of unusual devices that turn waste heat into sound energy, then into electricity.

A team led by physics professor Orest Symko is scheduled to demonstrate the thermoacoustic engines Friday at the Acoustical Society of America's annual meeting in Salt Lake City.

One doctoral student participating in the project created a cylindrical device smaller than a penny that can pump out 120 decibels of sound -- roughly equal to that produced by a rock concert or a police siren.

In a statement released by Symko, the researcher said he plans to test a range of thermoacoustic designs developed by the 2-year-old Thermal Acoustic Piezo Energy Conversion (TAPEC) project later this year. The tests will be conducted at an Army radar installation and at the Utah campus' hot water plant.

The Army hopes to harness the technology to reduce waste heat from devices such as radar, and for "producing a portable source of electrical energy which you can use in the battlefield to run electronics,” Symko said.

The TAPEC devices developed so far first convert heat into sound using cylindrical "resonators," which place a sound-producing surface between cold and hot heat exchangers. The resulting pressurized air travels across the surface, producing sound in the same way air pressure across the mouthpiece of a flute creates a musical tone. The sound is then used to drive piezoelectric devices that turn the acoustic pressure into electrical current.

Symko says the noise produced in the process can be mitigated with "sound absorbers." He anticipates that thermoacoustic devices will continue to shrink in size, allowing them to be incorporated in MEMS (microelectromechanical systems) for cooling and powering computers and other electronic devices.



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How coll isn't that!
By leidegre on 6/6/2007 6:52:52 AM , Rating: 3
While any average user obviously don’t want a scream desktop computer this kind of things I so cool. Energy conservation through transformation. A while back there were some news flashes about transforming heat back into electricity and if this takes us one step closer to that, why not?

But a high pitch tone? Naw, try music box instead, much more appealing...




RE: How coll isn't that!
By Etsp on 6/6/2007 8:34:32 AM , Rating: 2
At 120db??? Lol, that's a bit too loud for it to be applied to much of anything as is, I believe the article states that they convert that sound directly to electricity, so of the sound it creates, you hear much much less.


RE: How coll isn't that!
By jkostans on 6/6/2007 9:55:52 AM , Rating: 3
The article says they will be converting the sound using a piezoelectric material. Therefor the piezoelectric material is the only thing that needs to be exposed to the sound pressure and the system can be completely isolated from the outside environment. At least that's how I imagine they would do it. Any sound pressure escaping would be wasted energy.


RE: How coll isn't that!
By dnd728 on 6/6/2007 1:32:40 PM , Rating: 2
There are already commercial devices that transform residual heat into electricity, but they're all still pretty large and are generally used by factories and power plants.


RE: How coll isn't that!
By spluurfg on 6/6/2007 2:57:04 PM , Rating: 2
Yeah, the article said that they hope to move this new technology to the microscopic scale. I think also a goal would be to have a device that could generate power from small variances in ambient energy; gaining energy from the shift from day to night, for example.


Misleading?
By oTAL (blog) on 6/6/2007 11:34:57 AM , Rating: 2
quote:
The TAPEC devices developed so far first convert heat into sound using cylindrical "resonators," which place a sound-producing surface between cold and hot heat exchangers.

From what I gather this isn't that revolutionary.
It doesn't really transform heat into energy. What it does is transform a temperature gradient into energy which has been possible for a long time.
The major drawback of this is that miniaturization becomes less efficient since that usually diminishes temperature difference...

Still it does what it does in a very clever and innovative way that allows it to have some new possible applications. I do think this is a very nice scientific advancement, but it is all dressed up as revolutionary invention... and it's not. Lots of hype and not a lot of substance...

My humble opinion anyway.




RE: Misleading?
By Iridium on 6/6/2007 2:31:18 PM , Rating: 2
I did my undergrad work on this tech. It is really cool, but is not new. Ford Motor Company did a ton of work on this many years ago. The technolgy is/was being used by an ice cream compnay. I forget who...

making the device is really simple, the hard part is making effective heat exchangers and getting a significant deltaT for the device to pay off.

The device does not really convert energy from one form to another. It relies the capturing the heat energy from the expansion and contarction of gasses caused by acoustic waves. All sound energy creates a temperature differental, but since the these waves exist in a macro thermodynamic systm they are neglagable, but in a closed system with powerful sound waves the tempeature difference can be significant. There is one case wehre the thermoacoustic system was used to produce liquid hydrogen.


RE: Misleading?
By Iridium on 6/6/2007 2:35:39 PM , Rating: 2
oops I was thinking of an extension of this technology that has been around for a long time.... Thermoacousic refirgeration. But then again so has this! But then again a small thermoacousic referigerator would be more useful for cooling computers... Hmmmm back to the lab!


RE: Misleading?
By borismkv on 6/6/2007 7:48:58 PM , Rating: 2
This is only the first step. Converting that sound into electricity by using piezoelectric cells to generate a charge is a little bit different than current applications of the technology (As far as I know)


Erm, well...
By spluurfg on 6/6/2007 6:14:22 AM , Rating: 2
The fact that the US Army is funding the research suggests to me that it may also find application in more directly military projects than laptop batteries; for example, I read a few weeks ago in the Economist that there was a military concept of sowing a field or area with miniature probes which could act as motion sensors and relay information wirelessly. This sort of technology might allow such probes to canvass the environment for an energy source.




RE: Erm, well...
By Chernobyl68 on 6/6/2007 11:38:48 AM , Rating: 2
sound conversion into current = passive detection device. accoustic signatures would create an electrical signal when the sound is strong enough. the strength of the signal would account for strength of the source. with multiple sensors, you could triangulate the source in a similar way as seismic waves.


RE: Erm, well...
By The Boston Dangler on 6/6/2007 6:31:27 PM , Rating: 3
it's called a microphone


Fire Alarms
By xxeonn on 6/6/2007 11:40:30 AM , Rating: 2
The best practical use of this peice of device to me is to use them as fire alarms.

When the heat from a fire touches them they could generate a very high pitch sound to warn people that there is a fire.




RE: Fire Alarms
By Jeff7181 on 6/6/2007 1:45:26 PM , Rating: 3
And it can recharge your laptop battery until the fire is put out. :D


RE: Fire Alarms
By borismkv on 6/6/2007 7:46:54 PM , Rating: 2
If a fire is bad enough to heat up a fire alarm, it's already a little late to be sending out an alarm. Smoke is in the environment well before temperature increases become noticeable in a fire.


How does this compare to a peltier?
By littleprince on 6/6/2007 10:58:05 AM , Rating: 2
You can already convert heat into electricity running a peltier in reverse to what the computer community usually does.

It doesn't take much energy to create sound, but how much energy could you capture back from sound?

I mean heat has a lot of energy in it, are they sure that is the most efficient way of capturing the energy?




By Tamale on 6/6/2007 11:26:33 AM , Rating: 2
peltiers are hard to use in random situations.. they have to be set up right between hot and cold places..

the only other way we really have to turn heat into electricity is making steam, and that's a bitch too..

this has promise 'cause it looks like you can do it anywhere and without needing so much heat to make water boil


Free A/C
By LeftSide on 6/6/2007 11:37:54 PM , Rating: 2
This would be awsome. Instead of paying to cool my house, I could cool my house all day and get free electricty!




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