Turning Heat Into Electricity Through Sound

D

davo

Full Audioholic
I thought this was a neat little trick, probably coming to you soon via an exhaust fan add-on to amps etc.



Number 828 #1, June 13, 2007 by Phil Schewe and Ben Stein

Turning Heat Into Electricity Through Sound

Turning heat into electricity through sound has been demonstrated by the University of Utah group of physicist Orest Symko. The group has built devices that can create electricity from the heat that would otherwise be wasted in objects such as computer chips. The devices might potentially make extra electricity from the heat of nuclear power plant towers, or remove extra heat from military electronics.

At last week's meeting of the Acoustical Society of America in Salt Lake City, five of Symko's students demonstrated the latest versions of the devices, which they have been developing for a few years. The devices first convert heat into sound, and then sound waves into electricity. Typically, each device is a palm-sized cylinder containing a stack of materials such as plastic or metal or fiberglass.

Applying a heat source, such as a blowtorch, to one end of the stack creates a movement of air which then travels down the cylindrical tube. This warm, moving air sets up a sound wave in the tube, similar to the way in which blowing air into a flute creates sound.

The pitch, or frequency, of the sound wave depends on the dimensions of the tube; current designs blast audible sound, but smaller devices would create ultrasound. The sound wave then strikes a piezoelectric crystal, a commercially available material that converts sound into electricity when the sound waves put pressure on the crystal. Symko says a ballpark range of 10-25% of the heat gets converted into sound in typical situations.

The piezoelectric crystals then convert about 80-90% of the sound energy into electrical energy. Symko (orest@physics.utah.edu) expects the devices to be used in real-world applications within two years, and may provide a better alternative to photovoltaic solar cells in some situations. (Session 5aPA at meeting; also see University of Utah press release at http://www.unews.utah.edu/p/?r=053007-1)

Physics Resources - American Institute Of Physics
 
darien87

darien87

Audioholic Spartan
Cool.


By the way, Perth is where one of my favorite NFL kickers was from. Good 'ol Darren Bennett. His Aussie kicking style was great for making punts hard for opposing teams to handle cleanly.
 
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