Conductive Concrete Offers Building Security 162
zdburke writes: "In a slightly different spin on the electromagnet-protected server room in Stephenson's Cryptonomicon, the folks at the National Research Council have developed concrete that conducts electricity, or 'percolates,' allowing it to serve as an electromagnetic shield. Current uses lean toward heated loading docks, non-freezing bridges, and grounding large-scale electrical equipment, but the counter-espionage idea is cool. The NYTimes has a brief story, and the folks at UN Omaha have some great pictures. It's not exactly new (it won a Popular Science prize in 1997) but it's still cool stuff."
Wow... (Score:3, Funny)
Pavlov (Score:3, Informative)
Pavlov. That was one of several experiments involving behaviour modification.
Re:Pavlov (Score:2)
Re:Pavlov (Score:2)
At that point the dog would go nuts!
Re:Pavlov (Score:2)
(yes, bad for quoting myself)
The bells at feeding time was one of the other experiments. He also did the showing of shapes to mean different upcoming events. One was an oval, the other a circle. Then he gradually rounded the oval until the dog could not distinguish between them.
At that point the dog would go nuts!
Shapes and Tones experiments by Pavlov [yorku.ca]
Ref to just the bell experiments [pbs.org]
Pavlov shock experiments [seanet.com]
I do remember Skinner doing various things AFTER Pavlov, like teaching pidgeons to bowl(?) and such.
Re:Wow... (Score:2)
Re:Wow... (Score:1)
Re:Wow... (Score:2)
...19 minutes later...
Smith - "Hey pimply-faced-youth intern! Can you just sit at my desk for a moment while I run downstairs? I have an important call coming in, thanks."
Tsk tsk. Smith should know better than to fuck with the PFY.
HERF hacks ;-) (Score:2)
Blocks Cell Phones? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Blocks Cell Phones? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Blocks Cell Phones? (Score:1)
I'm already having issue with my 802.11b network at home that won't go through 2 freakin' walls. I imagine this stuff will wreak havoc with all sorts of electronic communications.
-jason
Re:Blocks Cell Phones? (Score:2)
Re:Blocks Cell Phones? (Score:2, Informative)
Basic physics will tell you that a closed conductive surface subject to an external electromagnetic field will exhibit no such field inside it's perimeter. I believe that the derivation is related to Guass's and Maxwell's laws of electromagnetics.
Re:Blocks Cell Phones? (Score:2, Informative)
Cool stuff? (Score:2)
Wouldn't "hot stuff" be more appropriate?
Cost and Uses (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Cost and Uses (Score:2)
Re:Cost and Uses (Score:1)
Re:Cost and Uses (Score:1)
Re:Cost and Uses (Score:2)
~Philly
Re:Cost and Uses (Score:1)
Re:Cost and Uses (Score:2)
A great big Faraday cage (Score:5, Interesting)
I shudder to think of the day when we will work in protective buildings like these, keeping company secdrets safe from Van Eck phreakers and war drivers, but also keeping out the mellow, smooth sounds of Office Light Jazz 94.7.
Re:A great big Faraday cage (Score:2, Informative)
BTW, you could always just get whatever radio station you want through the internet (land-line).
Re:A great big Faraday cage (Score:1)
Some people already work in such buildings. When I interviewed at the NSA back in the late 80s, they were putting up a Tempest-protected office building.
Re:A great big Faraday cage (Score:1)
will this make our buildings vulnerable to a
EM Pulse (like the one from a nuke).
EM Pulse comes through.. generates large amounts of voltage in building.. building melts.
Hrm...
internet radio (Score:1)
Re:A great big Faraday cage (Score:1)
I mean, hey, at least you'd have to walk in the door before phreaking the signal...
GMFTatsujin
Lightning (Score:1)
Floating concrete structures?!? (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Floating concrete structures?!? (Score:2)
Certainly, until the rebels cut power to or carve up the plate on the ground you're pushing against, or until your castle melts to slag from resistive heating due to the vast currents required
Thought about the same thing a while back, and concluded that the Koopa Ship method is more practical
Not melt, explode! (Score:2, Interesting)
Actually, the concrete, if it is like normal concrete, would probably explode instead of melting...the little air pockets inside it expand until they break the structure. It's neat. Hold a blowtorch to some concrete sometime---it crackles!
Wow! (Score:3, Funny)
Submitted to Web Pages That Suck (Score:1)
The web site (Score:2)
The bridge-deicing idea isn't unreasonable. From their numbers, for $500 per storm, you could de-ice a bridge 200' long and 4 lanes wide. That compares favorably with sending out snowplows, salt trucks, and such.
Re: (Score:1)
music studio (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:music studio (Score:1)
(Can't remember where I get the first part of that rant - somewhere/sometime off a previous slashdot post. My apologies to the original author...)
Re:music studio (Score:3, Funny)
Re:music studio (Score:2)
Concrete circuitry? (Score:4, Funny)
How about drywall transistors and logic-gate carpets?
I wont be happy till my split-level serves pr0n.
Heated loading docks (Score:2)
Brought to you by science.
Re:Heated loading docks (Score:2, Funny)
I worked in a grocery store and there was a vent down at the bottom of our dock. Hot air came out of it so a homeless guy started sleeping down there.
One night a truck backed down in to make a delivery while he slept....
.
Nevermind the espionage angle.. (Score:1)
No more salt (Score:1)
It kills slugs too. Who knows what good slugs do for our environment? Haha
Re:No more salt (Score:2)
Most places only put as much salt as is necessary (Edmonton for example puts 6-12% salt in sand for the roads) as it's expensive and doesn't work below a certain temp.
As for slugs - I don't know what they do for the environment, but they sure are tasty!
Non-freezing bridges? (Score:2, Insightful)
Please study a little science before you post stories from similarly unclued "visionaries".
Re:Non-freezing bridges? (Score:3, Insightful)
-- Tim
Gosh yer smart! (Score:1)
Re:Non-freezing bridges? (Score:1)
I think the idea is: resistively-heated concrete could maintain the bridge deck temperature above freezing, so that no ice needs to be melted in the first place.
Re:Non-freezing bridges? (Score:1, Interesting)
For another thing two CM of ice is 12-40 CM of snow (depending on humidity). That's an awfully big dump for the majority of the world the majority of the time; most of the time in most of the world you'll be dealing with small fractions of this.
For another thing, why would you possibly need to melt all the ice that quickly (even assuming you were stupid enough to let that much form in the first place)? Why not just let the thing run at lower wattage 24x7 (when it is snowing, or at night)? It only needs to keep the snow that is there from refreezing, and to melt any new accumulation.
Finally, "assuming 100% efficiency" ?? So what? What if it's not 100% efficient? What else is the waste product going to be besides heat?
Doesn't matter (Score:1)
Keeping something from freezing requires exactly the same amount of energy as melting it. Exactly. This is obvious to anyone who has studied science or used an ice cube.p. The waste produce is always heat. But it isn't always released near any ice. What about the sides and bottom of this road? What about patches of ice? What about transmission issues?
Re:Non-freezing bridges? (Score:2)
Salt isn't used because it doesn't work when it gets really cold. I think the magic temperature is 0F, since Mr. Fahrenheit used a salt & ice mixture to define 0F. (I'm not entirely sure about this.)
Re:Non-freezing bridges? (Score:2)
Re:Non-freezing bridges? (Score:2)
Re:Non-freezing bridges? (Score:1)
Negligible (Score:1)
Re:Non-freezing bridges? (why not) (Score:1)
Re:Non-freezing bridges? (Score:1)
If by "these guys" you mean "The University of Omaha", I think you'll lose that bet. Their "Conductive Concrete for Bridge Deicing" [unomaha.edu] experiement indicates that the average power generated by the conductive concrete was about 591 W/m^2, consistant with successful past efforts at electrical bridge deicing. Their estimated energy cost for this amount of power is $0.70 to $1.00
Please read the links before trying to make yourself sound smarter than everyone else.
heating (Score:3, Interesting)
But wouldn't it be cheaper and simpler to embed, say, a PVC 2-inch pipe in the concrete, and run warm water through that? Note that you can use this method with just about anything (dirt, asphalt, etc) and keep it from freezing.
If you want a method to directly heat it using electricity, run stainless steel pipe instead, and use it as a load.
I've frequently wondered why civil engineers haven't implemented either of the above techniques before. Chalked it up to "roads don't freeze enough".
Thoughts?
Re:heating (Score:1)
-- Tim
Re:heating (Score:1)
The hoover dam had pipes layed in for cooling purposes, the pipes were then filled with concrete.
-- tim
Re:heating (Score:2)
But the real reason heated pavement isn't used much is because electricity costs too much. You don't want to pay the power bill for trying to heat up the freaking outdoors! Conductive concrete won't change that. With buried pipes, you can also heat with a gas or oil furnace, which costs quite a lot less (90% efficient, compared to about 30% overall in the electric system), but it still costs too much in northern climates. And in southern climates where you'd only have to turn on the heat a few days a year, few people think snow is a big enough problem to add thousands to their initial construction cost.
Re:heating (Score:2)
p.s.
the school is Miami of Ohio, the best public school in Ohio .
Re:heating (Score:1)
Re:heating (Score:2)
Anyhow, note that the conductive concrete won't allow you to use the co-generated "free" heat, but requires the expensive electricity.
Re:heating (Score:1)
When the pipes leak, you have a jackhammering road crew in your living room to fix them.
They also have huge glass windows all around most of the outer walls. Lets in a lot of light, lets out a lot of IR and heated air. Obviously designed when gas and oil were 3 cents/ton.
Finally! (Score:1)
Re:Finally! (Score:1)
just don't use Russian contractors... (Score:1)
Question for a Civ Eng: (Score:2)
Intuition is telling me "yes to both", but I'm not a Civ...
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
Check this out... (Score:1)
Warning: professors at work (Score:1)
Same as ionized concrete? (Score:1)
It sempt like a good idea but I haven't heard anything else about it for quite awhile. Perhaps someday this tech will be common in homes, as people are becoming more conscious of home and workplace health in our increasingly estrogenic society.
What about... (Score:1)
Re:What about... (Score:1)
Re:What about... (Score:2)
There are heated toilet seats purchasable.
The problem, as with all great inventions, is the idiot factor. Joe Schmoe cracks the toilet seat or busts the wires with wear. One dark night he stumbles into the bathroom, whizzes on the seat, salty urine hits electric current, and it's "Don't Whizz on the Electric Fence" time. And then we get another lawyer-flinging spurious lawsuit or Darwin Awards candidate.
Don't underestimate the Idiot Factor. $cientogi$t$ would be a long extinct class of vicious nutball without it.
A New Option for the Tinfoil Hat Wearing Crowd (Score:1)
Of course, remember, just because you're paranoid doesn't mean they aren't out to get you...
Power consumption? (Score:1)
Conductive Roads... (Score:1)
:-)
Interesting ideas (Score:1)
Static Control (Score:3, Informative)
And the suggested use of electrically heated payment leaves me wondering where they plan to get free electricity.
But there is one good application for this. Electronics manufacturers need to control static throughout their facilities. Fixed objects are grounded by hooking up wires, but people walk around, circuit boards and parts are carried around on carts, etc., and the only way to ground these while in motion is through the floor. So we paid plenty for conductive tile, and some sort of conductive underlay. If we could have put a conductive layer in the concrete slab itself, it would have saved a bunch (even at 3x the price of regular concrete), and it would be more reliable and lower maintenance.
Re:Static Control (Score:2)
If you're standing barefoot on a damp concrete floor and come into contact with a "hot" or "live" wire, you'll learn very quickly (within one/one hundred twentieth of a second, or one/one hundredth for 50Hz locations) how conductive concrete can be, assuming, of course, that you survive the lesson.
thank god for EM shielding concrete... (Score:1)
NYT Random Login Generator (Score:1)
It's a simple HTML/javascripty thing to automatically generate a random NYTimes login every time you want to view a story. Just cut and paste the nytimes.com url you want to view, and hit the button.
If you could, please try to save the page locally and use it from your server or desktop, to keep the traffic to my server reasonable. Distribute at will.
Re:NYT Random Login Generator (Score:2)
Cell Phone Proof? (Score:1)
Wireless Guitars (Score:2)
"These go to eleven."
Heated Runways (Score:2)
I thought a big use for these were going to be for heated runways - so you don't have to worry about de-icing them anymore. (I just hope they don't heat them too much and then you have a bunch of lizards just hanging out on the runway warming themselves.)
Don't throw your wood stoves out yet (Score:2, Informative)
But for heating? Forget it! Two replies to this article mentioned something about how much energy it would require to melt ice. Now add the energy required to heat up the concrete. And know, that while electricity works quickly, it is just about the most expensive way to heat your home/whatever.
You might consider also, that while an abode of conductive material might be a great way to absorb stray radio signals coming your way, what are is your dwelling going to be emitting if you are hooking up AC voltage to it? If a micro-watt cell phone freaks you out, consider thousands of watts pumping through your house
Radiant heating systems are the way to imbed a heat source in concrete. The technology is gaining in popularity all the time, as it deserves.
Read more about it for yourself at: http://www.radiantcompany.com/ They are for profit, but the prices seem reasonable. They advocate do-it-yourself and lots of good info on the website.
It would be great to hear from an HVAC engineer on this, but I don't think they will tell you much different.
Bollux (a BSME)
Re:Don't throw your wood stoves out yet (Score:2)
Radiant heating works best when you're trying to heat an enclosed space. Consider the envornment and pick the appropriate technology. Where I live, radiant (hot water in concrete) is pretty common, but you wouldn't try to heat the driveway that way, because you would have to maintain probably about +40F even when it's -40F outdoors (an 80 degree differential). You need some amount of overheating as a way of preventing failure, if you heating system freezes it is totally useless and needs almost complete rebuilding. Certain antifreeze systems can be employed but they have other problems; in general you should build it with enough BTUs and backups to keep it above freezing at all envisioned temperatures and power outages. Electic hot water boilers are common but natural gas is readily available here so most people use a gas over electric (for backup) system.
Since radiant can be electically heated and it's slightly less efficent than thermal (electricity to water to concrete to objects vs electricity to concrete) it's not a given that it would be more efficent.
i haven't gotten to that part yet! you bastard! (Score:1)
RF Nightmare - buildings as antennas (Score:2)
Today, large buildings reflect radio signals, creating interference for many signals in the shorter wavelength (6m to 30cm) bands. Imagine how much worse this would be if the buildings them selves had strong electromagnetic fields, or worse yet, emitted AC fields?
Also, these structures will convert radio signals and other EMF into electric current. Theoretically, it is possible that such current could be in the tens of milliamps or even higher, making for passive RF radiators.
I know we already use a lot of steel in buildings, but this is usually grounded and steel is a really poor conductor compared to something like copper or silver. I'm assuming this conductive concrete has much better electric conductivity than steel.
Vortran out
Re:RF Nightmare - buildings as antennas (Score:2)
voltage (Score:3)
cool! (Score:2)
Re:Slashdot writers have to learn how to write (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Slashdot writers have to learn how to write (Score:1)
Kindly grab both of your ears tightly, one in each hand, and pull firmly until your head is extricated from your ass.