IndiaVision RSS Feed    Browse IndiaVision on Mobile    Subscribe to me on FriendFeed    Follow us on Twitter    Follow us on Facebook
News | Videos | Mobile | Jobs | Blog | Yellow Pages | Games | Jokes | Chat | e-Cards | Astrology | Articles | Recipes | Send Gifts
IndiaVision - An Informative Site on India
IndiaVision NEWS
Today : Sunday - May 27, 2012, 11:55am (GMT+5.5)
All News  
Top News
National News
International News
Business News
Sports News
   » Cricket
   » Football
Entertainment News
Sci - Tech
Politics News
Health & Fitness
Education
Travel
Lifestyle
Gulf News
Featured
 
::| Latest News
News in Pictures

US President Barack Obama, speaking for the first time about allegations that Secret Service agents hired prostitutes, said on Sunday that "of course I'll be angry" if those accusations are proven true by an investigation.

Sci - Tech
 

Scientists harvest waste energy to turn water into usable hydrogen fuel

Friday - Mar 12, 2010, 07:28pm (GMT+5.5)
[+] Text [-]

Washington, March 12 (ANI): Reports indicate that materials scientists at the University of Wisconsin-Madison have designed a way to harvest small amounts of waste energy and harness them to turn water into usable hydrogen fuel.

The process is simple, efficient and recycles otherwise-wasted energy into a useable form.

"This study provides a simple and cost-effective technology for direct water splitting that may generate hydrogen fuels by scavenging energy wastes such as noise or stray vibrations from the environment," according to the scientists.

"This new discovery may have potential implications in solving the challenging energy and environmental issues that we are facing today and in the future," they added.

The researchers, led by UW-Madison geologist and crystal specialist Huifang Xu, grew nanocrystals of two common crystals, zinc oxide and barium titanate, and placed them in water.

When pulsed with ultrasonic vibrations, the nanofibers flexed and catalyzed a chemical reaction to split the water molecules into hydrogen and oxygen.

When the fibers bend, asymmetries in their crystal structures generate positive and negative charges and create an electrical potential.

This phenomenon, called the piezoelectric effect, has been well known in certain crystals for more than a century and is the driving force behind quartz clocks and other applications.

Xu and his colleagues applied the same idea to the nanocrystal fibers.

"The bulk materials are brittle, but at the nanoscale they are flexible," he said, like the difference between fiberglass and a pane of glass.

Smaller fibers bend more easily than larger crystals and therefore also produce electric charges easily.

So far, the researchers have achieved an impressive 18 percent efficiency with the nanocrystals, higher than most experimental energy sources.

In addition, according to Xu, "because we can tune the fiber and plate sizes, we can use even small amounts of (mechanical) noise - like a vibration or water flowing - to bend the fibers and plates. With this kind of technology, we can scavenge energy waste and convert it into useful chemical energy."

Rather than harvest this electrical energy directly, the scientists took a novel approach and used the energy to break the chemical bonds in water and produce oxygen and hydrogen gas.

With the right technology, Xu envisions this method being useful for generating small amounts of power from a multitude of small sources - for example, walking could charge a cell phone or music player and breezes could power streetlights.



|

Rating (Votes: )   

blog comments powered by Disqus

Other Articles:
MINI-ME to uncover secrets of outer layers of Earth's atmosphere (12th Mar, 2010)
NASA proposes mission to snatch a piece from 'time capsule' asteroid (12th Mar, 2010)
Vision originated 600 mln yrs ago in sea-dwelling hydra (12th Mar, 2010)
Lunar mirror mystery solved by scientists (12th Mar, 2010)
New oral treatment works better than lotions to eradicate lice (12th Mar, 2010)
Mums teach kids lessons of life - even before birth (12th Mar, 2010)
Copernicus invented geology more than 500 years ago (12th Mar, 2010)
Body's response to taste or smell of meal 'a diabetes risk factor' (12th Mar, 2010)
'Terminator asteroids' can regenerate after being nuked (12th Mar, 2010)
Middle-aged women have better memories than men (12th Mar, 2010)
Brain tumour's 'grow-or-go' switch found (12th Mar, 2010)
Quality of Wikipedia entries depends on authors' collaboration (12th Mar, 2010)
Now, sticking plaster that can cure cancer (12th Mar, 2010)
China warns Google of 'consequences' (12th Mar, 2010)
Iran starts production of medium range missiles (12th Mar, 2010)
Meteorites could have kick-started life on earth 4 billion years ago (11th Mar, 2010)
Mysterious cosmic 'dark flow' tracked deeper into universe (11th Mar, 2010)
Students who understand Earth's geological age are more likely to accept human evolution (11th Mar, 2010)
Archaeologists to embark on investigation into Shakespeare's later life (11th Mar, 2010)
Now, well behaving multi-processor computers (11th Mar, 2010)
Car that uses 10,000 cups of espresso as fuel! (11th Mar, 2010)
Exploiting cancers' own architecture may lead to their destruction (11th Mar, 2010)
Extreme and moderate heat may help cure tumours (11th Mar, 2010)
Soon, therapeutic socks for diabetics (11th Mar, 2010)
Electronic drug information system reduces risk for ICU patients (11th Mar, 2010)





Visit IndiaVision On Your Mobile
Buy Domain Names Online
Get Free Mail
Free Mail
Login | Sign Up
Download IndiaVision Free Toolbar
FireFox Safari Internet Explorer
 
Contact Us | Advertise with Us | Privacy Policy | Disclaimer | Terms of Use
Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...