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Science

Hydrogen Micro Turbine Only 4mm In Diameter 353

savaget writes: "Luc G. Frchette of the Columbia University Microsystem Engineering Laboratory has developed a 20W electrical generator powered by a hydrogen turbine just 4mm in diameter. For more details, read the Wired article or an older Popular Science article. The tiny generator is more efficient than any battery and is expected to find military and commercial uses including robotics." Imagine the uses ...
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Hydrogen Micro Turbine Only 4mm In Diameter

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  • by blair1q ( 305137 ) on Monday November 26, 2001 @06:57PM (#2616227) Journal

    That's 40 KHz.

    Your dog is going to go totally nuts every time you turn on your PDA.

    --Blair
    • I assume there's some sort of formula for figuring that out, could you share it with us.....?
      • Its quite simple...
        2.4million revolutions per minute
        Divide by 60 to get revolutions per second
        revolutions per second is analogous to frequency(Hz)
        • ! something my high school science classes never covered D:! lousy public schools...
      • by leucadiadude ( 68989 ) on Monday November 26, 2001 @07:10PM (#2616323) Homepage
        Umm, Hertz equals cycles(or rotations) per second.

        (2.4E+06RPM (Rotations / Minute) / (60 Seconds / Minute) == 40000 Hertz

        Or 40KHz
    • by hawk ( 1151 ) <hawk@eyry.org> on Monday November 26, 2001 @07:49PM (#2616521) Journal
      Yeah, but think of how fast your laptop will move under it's own power . . .


      That, and now the "Turbo" switch on the front ofthe old machines will be literally accurate--instead of slowing down the machine for old games, it will kick in the generator and boost cpu voltage . . .


      hawk

    • by mangu ( 126918 ) on Monday November 26, 2001 @07:52PM (#2616533)
      Being perfect to the last atom or so, there should be no vibration at the fundamental frequency. I counted 20 blades in the Popular Science picture, so the actual noise peak should be at 800kHz. Easily damped, and out of pet hearing frequency range.
      • Micromachining techniques are far from "perfect to the last atom or so".

        They're akin to dipping easter eggs.

        Actually, they're akin to dipping easter eggs in hexafluoric acid and making an educated guess as to when the shell has ablated by 2 microns.

        Micromachined parts won't be perfect to the last atom until they're milled using a scanning tunnelling microscope.

        --Blair
        • Micromachining techniques are far from "perfect to the last atom or so".


          Gotme!


          they're akin to dipping easter eggs in hexafluoric acid and making an educated guess as to when the shell has ablated by 2 microns.


          But they are ablated more or less symmetrically along the whole thing. Perhaps the largest irregularity is temperature gradient. It's different from a piece that's machined in a lathe, in that the machined piece is deformed by vibrations in an additive way, that is, rotation induced vibrations are always in the same direction.

        • Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • Your dog is going to go totally nuts every time you turn on your PDA.

      You think the dogs are going to go nuts?

      That's nothing compared to how the ladies will be acting when they start making 2.4 million RPM vibrators...
  • What's the fuel? (Score:2, Insightful)

    by macrom ( 537566 )
    Both articles say the engine is powered by fuel, but what fuel are we talking about? Regualar old gasoline/octane? Am I supposed to stop by the local gas station and top off my laptop battery each day on my drive to work? The Popular Science article mentions hydrogen being burned...maybe this means that they are looking for "alternative" fuels as opposed to fossil fuels. Then again, the Wired article hints at fossil fuels as the energy source. Someone shed some light on this please.

    greg
    • What part of "Hydrogen micro-turbine" didn't you get? *grin*
      • The article at Wired clearly uses the words "fossil fuel" in connection with the word "gas". The Popular Science article is more clear insofar that it does not mention fossil fuels.
    • by NSupremo ( 161699 )
      The contaminants in gasoline would be far too great for a machine this tiny. Cars have huge engines that still get clogged up...

      Hydrogen should be what fuels this nation and we should make that move as soon as possible. We have everything to gain and absolutely nothing to lose.
  • Heat kills (Score:3, Funny)

    by Walter Bell ( 535520 ) <(wcbell) (at) (bellandhorowitz.com)> on Monday November 26, 2001 @07:05PM (#2616279) Homepage
    One of my drinking buddies worked on a project similar to this. He told me that the heat problems mentioned in the article were the single biggest obstacle to making a successful mini-turban. Apparently researchers have been working for years on these devices, but they have watched as battery technology has advanced and their heat problems remained. Basically the main problem is that the intense heat generated by combustion places an upper bound on the lifetime of these devices, and that upper bound is substantially lower than the upper bound on a Li-Ion battery's lifetime. Back in the days of NiCd, shoddy "Renewal" cells, and expensive alkalines, this might have provided some much-needed competition. But for now it is just behind the time, despite the fact that it is so small.

    ~wally
    • ...He told me that the heat problems mentioned in the article were the single biggest obstacle to making a successful mini-turban.

      Actually, I've found the single biggest obstacle to be working with those tiny pieces of linen.. I'm hoping nanotech will provide me with a solution in the near future.

  • heat (Score:5, Funny)

    by tdrury ( 49462 ) on Monday November 26, 2001 @07:05PM (#2616287) Homepage
    Apparently it generates a lot more heat than a conventional battery. Too hot for a cell phone. New slogan:

    "Reach out and torch someone."

    -tim
    • But just think about the possibilities with that. The instant hair dryer. The ultimate electric blanket. The McDonalds Happy-Meal sized flame thrower (the kids love that one).
    • Hm. Heat + tank of hydrogen = never mind.
  • by rice_burners_suck ( 243660 ) on Monday November 26, 2001 @07:06PM (#2616296)

    There was a movie at some time or other where they had an electronic bee, run by remote control. A tiny power generator could make such things possible in the not-so-distant future. Imagine how far we've come.

    There was a discussion several days ago about batteries that are refilled with gas, rather than recharged. It sounds rather messy to me, while a system that uses a hydrogen generator certainly sounds cleaner and more efficient.

    I wonder what kind of noise this system makes. If it is very quiet, we may very soon find that batteries in some of the higher end consumer devices are replaced by some mechanical generator such as this.

    It may even be suitable for use in larger power generation scheme. Think of clustering a whole bunch of these tiny generators. Although they are currently quite expensive to manufacture, I believe that micromachines and nanotech will soon advance to such a level that it will be very possible to mass produce tiny machines.

    Which brings me to the idea of tiny machines that have their own built-in hydrogen power generator. Now that's technology!

    Oh well.

    • In Popular Electronics or some such magazine, there was a one-page article (mostly pictures) about how scientists had rigged a live cockroach to recieve its motor commands from a microcontroller - in essence, they'd created a living robot. It could still control its movements when the chip wasn't providing any, but when the chip was, the stronger electrical signals blocked out any that the roach would naturally create. They even strapped a tiny temperature sensor to it and drove it around under stoves and things.

      Maybe with this technology, they won't need the roach.
  • Why? (Score:4, Offtopic)

    by cperciva ( 102828 ) on Monday November 26, 2001 @07:08PM (#2616305) Homepage
    Why would anyone *want* a tiny hydrogen-powered turbine generator? Fuel cells are already more efficient than they are even hoping this will become; fuel cells also likely to live much longer since they don't have any moving parts.

    I'll agree that it's cool to take things that we are used to at macroscopic scales and make them tiny, but it usually isn't going to be an efficient way of doing anything.
    • Re:Why? (Score:3, Insightful)

      by sinster ( 518986 )
      There's efficiency and there's power output.

      The problem with fuel cells is that they're BIG for the power that they produce. A turbine is small for the power that it produces. So this dime-sized turbine supposedly generates 20W of power. How big of a fuel cell do you need in order to get 20W out of hydrogen?

      I don't know the numbers myself. It could very well be that a fuel cell's power-to-volume ratio is good enough that you could still manage to power a laptop off of one. But since it's not as good as a turbine, that means that the turbine-powered "battery" pack would have more space available for fuel.

      Even better, a turbine's efficiency (potentially) increases as you get it smaller. The major stumbling block for turbines is making the fan strong enough to handle the huge stresses that are put on it by the awesome speeds at which it rotates. But as a turbine gets smaller, its strength increases: mass decreases as the cube, but the various strength measurements (torsional, tensile, etc.) decrease by the square of the size. Silicon is far too weak for full-sized turbines, but (apparently) it works just fine for these submini turbines.
      • Re:Why? (Score:2, Informative)

        by londenberg ( 53946 )
        You've got it backwards. The stresses do go down by something like the square of the sizes. But the power output decreases by something like the cube of the sizes. The rub (pun intended) is that while power is decreasing by cubes, friction is only decreasing by squares. So as you get smaller, the poweroutput/friction ratio is getting smaller.
    • Re:Why? (Score:3, Insightful)

      by victim ( 30647 )
      Damn you and your insightful pragmatism! You rob us of our micro-turbine powered dreams.

      Fuel cells will win in efficiency. Probably by a large margin.

      Perhaps turbines have other advantages...
      • cost - turbines could be very cheap. Micro fabrication can be cheap (not yet, later) and fuel cells require expensive catylsts. These might be well suited to disposable items.
      • power density - it looks like 20W of turbine will be much smaller and lighter than 20W of fuel cell. For many applications this difference will be dwarfed by the mass and volume of the fuel. Other applications, like short-mission robots will benefit from the lighter generator.
    • ...why I want one, I just do!!!

      You may as well question, I dunno, the flavor of Applejacks or something!

    • For exosceleton (Score:2, Insightful)

      by nyri ( 132206 )
      It was in New scientist (no link available, sorry). Engines like these are needed in joints of exosceleton. Other solutions (backbag engine or batteries) are not viable.

      Anyway, it is not fruitful to shootdown good research just because nobody can't come up with application in a second. The question why anyone wants tiny hydrogen-powered turbine generator will be definetly ansered in future.

      -- Nyri
    • The only reason that remains significant is that Fuel Cells still, generaly, require much cleaner fuels than turbines.

      Any contaminants can reduce the efficiency of a fuel cell significantly, whereas only a significant build up of 'sticky' contamination will effect a turbine significantly.
      • But this particular turbine requires hydrogen for it's fuel. That's the same as the ideal fuel cell fuel. And quite easy to clean, if you can handle it at all. It will pass through a filter fine enough to take out oxygen.
  • What's stopping us from making a big generator out of a microturbine like this? Put a LOT of them side by side and you can get a lot more power per square metre of hydroelectric dam.

    You get the added bonus of your turbines not eating fish, too. All you need to do is cheapen these tiny generators down below the price of a big turbine per unit volume.
    • At about one thousandth the size of a regular power station, the engine-on-a-chip will create about 1 millionth the power level

      The author doesn't specify whether "regular power station" means hydroelectric or not, but if this is three orders of magnitude less efficient by volume than a regular large power station, it's exceedingly unlikely that putting a lot of them side by side would be a smart solution.

      Of course, who knows how it would behave if the turbine were powered by flowing water rather than hydrogen combustion.

    • Turbines improve in efficiency with size. That's why modern aircraft have two huge engines, instead of eight small ones like a B-52. It's also one reason that automotive turbines have never really worked.
  • by HarrisonSilp ( 527951 ) on Monday November 26, 2001 @07:27PM (#2616421) Homepage
    I always thought his head was kind of small for regular sized turbans.....
  • So what happens when you spill some liquid hydrogen into your expensive laptop? Doesn't liquid hydrogen need/exist at a cetrain (cold) temperature?

    I'm no expert, but I think the fuel itself could pose some problems. Anyone have more info?
    • So what happens when you spill some liquid hydrogen into your expensive laptop?

      It will run better :-) We've had umpteen Slashdot articles about the most effective way of cooling your PC, this tops the lot.

      I think the fuel itself could pose some problems

      Only if you manage to flood your laptop with liquid hydrogen, get your finger wedged in the case for a few seconds, then upon dislodging accidentally knock it against a wall.

      Phillip.

    • A laptop would not be fueled with liquid hydrogen. It boils at about 20 kelvin (-253C or - 423F). In portable sizes, the only way to keep a tank that cool is by letting some of the liquid evaporate and carry off the heat as it leaks in. Since there isn't much room inside a laptop for insulation around the tank, I expect the hydrogen would evaporate away even faster than a laptop battery runs down.

      It would be compressed gaseous hydrogen. I'm not sure about what pressure would be best -- the higher the pressure, the smaller the tank, but also the thicker the walls have to be and the more hazardous it is if it ruptures.

      More likely, by the time this gets to real world applications it will run on butane. (Butane is a gas at room temperature and pressure, but it turns liquid at room temperature and moderate pressures that even unreinforced plastic can hold.)
  • by DaoudaW ( 533025 ) on Monday November 26, 2001 @07:30PM (#2616432)
    Most micromotors demonstrated to date have simply succeeded to overcome the viscous drag on the rotor, leaving no power to drive other com-ponents and limiting their use for low-load actuation.

    Luc Frechette just published ASSESSMENT OF VISCOUS FLOWS IN HIGH-SPEED MICRO ROTATING MACHINERY FOR ENERGY CONVERSION APPLICATIONS [columbia.edu] in which he lays out the constraints of micro-motors and how he hopes to overcome them.
  • They should be trying to make turbines out of cheaper material, like AOL CDs. If your turbine breaks, its no big deal, because there's probably a new one waiting in your mailbox.
  • by rjamestaylor ( 117847 ) <rjamestaylor@gmail.com> on Monday November 26, 2001 @08:32PM (#2616708) Journal
    Representatives from battery manufacturers Duracell, Rayovac and Energizer were unavailable for comment.
    I was intrigued by this snappy, concluding claim. How could all the representatives of these major companies be unavailable for comment. Then I noticed the by-line:
    The Little Engine That Could Be

    By Louise Knapp
    2:00 a.m. Nov. 26, 2001 PST
    No kidding their unavailable! 2 AM on post-Thanksgiving Monday!

    Louise, baby, try to finish your stories prior to Thanksgiving weekend next time...sheesh...

  • Just hype? Again? (Score:3, Insightful)

    by osgeek ( 239988 ) on Monday November 26, 2001 @10:53PM (#2617292) Homepage Journal
    The way I interpreted the Wired article, this thing is still theoretical. They didn't even mention a working prototype. I refuse to read anything real into a Popular Electronics/Mechanics/Science article. That's all complete crap.

    I'm sure a couple years will pass and we'll all wonder what happened to that "micro turbine thing". We won't be discussing it much, though, because /. will instead be discussing the latest vapor being hyped.


  • An interesting story..

    A few years ago when I used to be a SysAdmin for U of A's Chemistry Department, I remember one morning coming into the lab and seeing a group of grad students huddled around an SGI terminal, where the teacher was giving a demonstration. The demonstration was of a "hydrogen ion engine"..One of the faculty researchers within the department had managed to successfully model the tail section of a spermatazoa using a 3D molecular modeller we had. After giving a short (somewhat technical) explanation of the atomic structure of the tail, he demonstrated how the "motor" of a spermatazoa tail works. The sperm absorbs hydrogen ions with its head, and passes them through its body to the tail section. The interaction of a single hydrogen atom with a portion of the tail section causes the entire base of the tail to whip around 360 degrees, like the crank shaft on a car engine. The simulation was played, so that the students could see how hydrogen ions were absorbed, and essentially turned into fuel for the motor housed within the tail of the sperm.

    Keep in mind, this wasn't a "simulation". The software being used is an atomic modeller and conformation engine designed to run on supercomputers that costs a hefty $15,000 per license. It was quite a feat to completely reconstruct the tail of a spermatazoa out of individual atoms and have it function exactly as it does in nature.

    Cheers,
  • using an example cited in the article, what airline in the world is going to let me on a plane with a laptop powered by 4 fluid ounces of liquid hydrogen and a 20w microturbine? Sounds pretty close to a walking, talking, potential incindiary to me. Just turn off the CPU fan and much merriment may ensue.
    (similar issue with fuel cells, too, for that matter.)


    -dB

  • The tiny generator is more efficient than any battery and is expected to find military and commercial uses including robotics.

    Does that mean we'll see an upgrade with this for Mindrover?!? Woohoo!
  • Comment removed based on user account deletion

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