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Hans De Keulenaer

Energy Harvesting the Next Big Thing for the Smart Grid | The Energy Collective - 0 views

  • Solar panels capture energy from light and convert it to electricity.   This is the most visible form of energy harvesting, but it is hardly the only one.  Energy harvesting captures energy lost as heat, light, sound, vibration, or movement.  Devices that harvest or scavenge energy can capture, accumulate, store, condition, and manage this energy into electricity for consumption.  That’s important, because our existing electricity infrastructure is extremely wasteful in its use of energy.  For instance, today’s technologies used in electricity generation are not energy efficient.  Traditional gas or steam-powered turbines convert heat to mechanical energy, which is then converted to electricity.  Up to two thirds of that energy input is lost as heat.  Those old incandescent bulbs (technology invented by Thomas Edison in 1879) were real energy losers too.  Ninety percent of the electricity flowing into incandescent bulbs ends up as waste heat. That’s lost energy, which is why smart federal legislation banned incandescents in favor of more energy efficient sources of lighting starting in 2012.
Infogreen Global

British researchers to develop solar energy harvesting technology at nannoscale - 2 views

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    Provided new innovative methods of energy capture and storage are discovered, developed and exploited rapidly, the sun could provide sufficient energy to make up the shortfall. Nanoscale technologies can enable new solar energy harvesting solutions through the generation of novel materials that can be deployed to deliver commercially attractive efficiencies at a low cost and a reasonable lifetime of service.
Colin Bennett

Scaling small energy harvesters for the grid - 2 views

  • there are now other forms of energy harvesters developed initially at the micro level which are now being scaled to produce enough energy to replace or supplement grid power. For example, take the humble bicycle dynamo - based on an electrodynamic energy harvester. The same technology is also used in large scale wind power, but now it has been redesigned to work beyond a rotary means. EnOcean, Germany, offer more than 500 products based on this technology from light switches powered by pressing the switch to wirelessly monitored mouse traps powered by the mouse entering the trap. Re designing the decades old technology is now making other, larger scale applications possible.
Hans De Keulenaer

Spotlight on energy harvesting - 0 views

  • Before going any further, let's look at the forces driving energy harvesting, aka energy scavenging. While it would be convenient to say the technology's rise is tied directly to the "green" movement, it really results from a confluence of factors: Device output voltage is increasing, power-management circuits have lower losses and higher efficiency, and ICs that actually do the intelligent work and data transmission are operating at ever-decreasing voltage and power levels.
Colin Bennett

New solar cell cuts out the middle man, harvests hydrogen from water - Engadget - 0 views

  • Some Penn State researchers are taking a cue from nature and have built the first solar cell that can effectively split water to harvest the hydrogen
  • ty gritty of dye usage and other such nonsense, we do know that such a system could eventually attain 15% or so efficiency, providing a nice and clean way to gather power for that fuel cell car of the future.
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    Another advance on the solar energy front. The article itself summarises the importance of this article "while we do not pretend to understand the nitty gritty of dye usage and other such nonsense, we do know that such a system could eventually attain 15% or so efficiency, providing a nice and clean way to gather power for that fuel cell car of the future".
davidchapman

Technology Review: A New Twist on Hydropower - 0 views

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    taking advantage of energy-packed vortices that are formed when water flows past a cylindrical object, even at low speeds. Salmon and trout are known to leverage the force created by these naturally occurring water swirls so that they can swim upstream. A new mechanical device designed to economically harvest that energy and convert it into electricity could turn waterpower into a much larger part of the world's renewable-energy mix.
Colin Bennett

Harvesting the wind under tall turbines | Cleantech.com - 0 views

  • "Our market is underneath the existing turbines," he told Cleantech.com. "It's like drilling for oil below where the others drill."
Hans De Keulenaer

What's Next In Science & Technology - Harvesting the energy of human movement to pr... - 0 views

  • The so-called "Crowd Farm," as envisioned by James Graham and Thaddeus Jusczyk, both M.Arch candidates, would turn the mechanical energy of people walking or jumping into a source of electricity.
Hans De Keulenaer

HUMACON » A Way to Harvest Electricity from Trees - 0 views

  • An engineering company claimed it could produce electricity simply by wiring a nail in the tree’s trunk to a metal rod in the ground.
davidchapman

After Gutenberg » Wind Turbine Variable Electronic Gearing - 0 views

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    a new kind of generator that's well suited to harvesting energy from wind. It could lower the cost of wind turbines while increasing their power output by 50 percent.
Energy Net

Sun shines on a solution for hydrogen production - 0 views

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    UK scientists have made hydrogen from water in a simple experiment on a lab bench. Fraser Armstrong, at the University of Oxford, and colleagues attached an enzyme and a light-harvesting dye to titanium dioxide particles to make a hydrogen-producing system powered by sunlight.
Colin Bennett

Crystals turn roads into power stations - 1 views

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    by placing piezoelectric crystals under the asphalt that convert vibration into electricity, Israeli engineers hope to harvest energy from passing vehicles.
Colin Bennett

Cool Earth Solar: Solar Power from "Balloons" : CleanTechnica - 0 views

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    One of the more thorny issues with any form renewable energy is collecting it. There is plenty of wind to meet our energy needs, the trick is "harvesting" it. The same goes of solar. As Cool Earth Solar's CEO Rob Lamkin says, "If you're going to replace hydrocarbons with solar, you're going to need a lot of collecting surface."
Colin Bennett

Flexible Charge Pump: Harvesting Mechanical Energy Through Zinc Oxide Wires - 0 views

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    Researchers from Georgia Institute of Technology developed a new type of small-scale electric power generator, based on stretching and releasing zinc oxide wires encapsulated in a flexible plastic with two ends bonded.
Colin Bennett

Deep-Water Wind: In the Wind, Out of Sight | EcoGeek | Wind, Turbines, Turbine, Power, ... - 0 views

shared by Colin Bennett on 26 Feb 08 - Cached
  • A Norwegian company called Sway is developing a deepwater system that will allow turbines to be situated farther out to sea where winds can be steadier and stronger, and where the turbines are hidden from all save a few passing ships.
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    A Norweigan company, SWAY A/S, is developing a deepwater wind turbine system. It seems that this system may offer a technical solution to two issues which are related to wind.  These  issues are that turbines are an eyesore for some and that of positioning turbines to receive a consistent wind flow. By enabling turbines to be placed far out to sea SWAY theoretically overcomes the eyesore issue. Also, wind flow may be more consistent in the open ocean and therefore a more approporiate environment to harvest consistent wind.
     
Colin Bennett

Magnetic Field Powers 1,301 Fluorescent Lights - Flickering FIELD by Richard Box (GALLERY) - 0 views

  • The lights, which look like a freshly harvested wheat field, aren’t plugged into anything, and they’re not solar powered either. It’s actually the magnetic radiation from the currents of electricity traveling above that give these bulbs their glowing juice.
Colin Bennett

The Oil Drum | Alternative Wind Power Experiments - SkySails and Airborne Wind Turbines - 0 views

  • Wind power is currently the fastest growing renewable energy source (in terms of capacity - solar has a faster percentage growth rate), and looks like remaining so into the next decade. While most attention is focussed on the mainstream approach of generating power using large wind turbines - both onshore and, as Jerome recently looked at, offshore - there are a wide range of alternatives being considered for harvesting energy from the winds. In this post I'll look at 2 approaches that have received some attention in the press recently - attaching kite sails to ships and airborne wind turbines
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    To be explored after we've fully exploited energy efficiency's potential, and all the onshore and offshore technologies we can think off. But the market will take care of this automatically, unless the EU comes up with the idea of a kite directive ...
Colin Bennett

Renewable Energy Tech Uses Rain - Piezoelectric - 0 views

  • In the 21st century we have seen numerous ways to create alternative energies. Some are much more popular than others (Eco Football), but throughout the thought process there seems to be a unique pattern in the sources of renewable energy, most of which are inspired by mother nature. Piezoelectric is a science that produces energy as an object is bent, deformed, or stressed. According to Groovy Green “Scientists at the CEA/Leti-Minatec in Grenoble are looking at this technology as a way to harness the vibrations caused by falling raindrops. According to the article, the system works with raindrops ranging in diameter from 1 to 5 mm, and simulations show that it’s possible to recover up to 12 milliwatts from one of the larger ‘downpour’ drops
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    Another apparent harebrained idea. Wouldn't it be more economic to capture rain and run it through a hydro turbine?
Colin Bennett

Microwind Generator: 30X More Efficient and Cheaper! | EcoGeek | Wind, Power, Out, Comm... - 0 views

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    Come on? If 30 times more efficient than current turbines which are about 30% efficient in harvesting wind into electricity ... Do I need to say more.
davidchapman

Technology Review: Harvesting Power from the Ocean - 0 views

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    Researchers from SRI International recently completed the first ocean tests of a system that uses a so-called artificial muscle to generate power from the motion of a buoy riding up and down on the waves. The prototype produces very little electricity but the researchers say that wave farms based on the technology could eventually rival wind turbines in power output, providing a significant source of clean energy. The SRI system is not much more than a sheet of rubber attached to a weight. It has "the mechanical complexity of a rubber band," says SRI senior researcher Roy Kornbluh.
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