Wireless energy transfer
April 19, 2010 by Dirk Visser
Filed under innovation
New research is bringing energy transfer into the wireless world. Soon, a central hub could be charging your batteries, laptop, televisions, electric cars, right through the air.
Over the past few years, a number of companies have been racing to put wireless energy on the market. In 2007, researchers at MIT revealed a project that powered a light bulb remotely. The physicist and project leader Marin Soljacic (winner of a MacArthur “genius grant” Fellowship) went on to found the start-up WiTricity.
In the 2007 expeiment they powered a 60W light bulb across a room. At the Nikkei electronics conference in Tokyo in October 2009, they were able to power a 1,000-watt klieg light from across the room. WiTricity’s record so far is 3,000 watts – enough to fully charge an electric car, so long as it’s in the same room (or garage).
The basic underlying principle for transmitting power wirelessly goes back more than a century to the work of Nikola Tesla and other pioneers of electricity, but the MIT team invented a way of making the process far more efficient and practical.
The system works by creating a strong electromagnetic resonance between the sending and receiving coils – similar to the way a tuning fork can start vibrating when exposed to a sound of exactly the right frequency, or the way a radio antenna can be tuned to just the frequency of a single station out of the hundreds that are simultaneously broadcasting their signals. In this case, the magnetic resonance between the two coils is unaffected by objects in between the coils, and by the same token objects between the coils – including people – are not affected by the magnetic fields.
Several concerns, even initially from WiTricity CEO Eric Giller, have been raised about the potential health risks as magnetism from MRI machines can disable pacemakers. But, MRI magnetism is about 10,000 stronger than that in WiTricity and the Institute of Physics in London has found WiTricity’s magnetic field “has no detrimental effects on the human body.”
Already, companies focused on a special application of wireless electricity have broken into the retail market with force. Powermat, and soon WiPower, provide “wireless charging” stations for home electronics. Instead of plugging in your mobile phone or handheld video game, you just strap a receiver on it, and place it on a charging mat. This “drop and charge” innovation is set to make a big impact in retail sales (Powermat sold more than 750,000 products in just two months) and could be the first step to the wireless electricity revolution that changes the way we power our lives.
Gieler of WiTricity mentioned at the TED 2009 conference that the technology can conceivably still get a lot better. We could use a similar method of coupling to power objects from a meter away or farther. At that distance, we could power electric cars while they were still on the road, or create homes without plugs.
For more information read here… or here….
Small, clean, green machines
April 19, 2010 by Dirk Visser
Filed under innovation
MIT CityCarWhile mass transportation systems such as trains or busses are hailed as the solution for urban mobility, there is often the problem with the last mile. MIT Media Lab (with support from GM) has developed a small car, the CityCar, specifically to be used in an urban context and for car sharing.The 2-seater cars are fully electric and also stackable. They work a bit like shopping carts in when the behind car touches a parked one in front, the front car lifts its body enabling stacking. When you want to drive off again, you merely touch a button and the front car disengages and moves slightly forward. The idea is that anyone uses any car.
A further feature is that the cars are capable of 360° steering, making parking a dream.
Because the cars are part of a single, computerized network, their placement can be coordinated to reduce traffic congestion or make transportation options available at peak times and places. Rental charges could fluctuate to encourage alternate routes. Commuters could keep track of where and when cars and parking spaces are available in real time, using cellphones or other hand-held devices to track the cheapest or the most convenient car, spot, or route.
Ryan Chin, one of team working on this project, said: “When you think of this, you shouldn’t think of a car. You should think of it as a new personal and sustainable mobility system and service. This is a clean and green machine.”
MIT has submitted a proposal to a government in Asia that is interested in building a network of these cars in one of their cities. The CityCar was part of the plan submitted by MIT that also recently won the 2009 Buckminster Fuller Challenge.
Lower cost Maglev transport solution
April 19, 2010 by Dirk Visser
Filed under innovation
Engineers at LaunchPoint Technologies have been working with Applied Levitation and Fasttransit Inc, to develop a completely new, revolutionary mode of maglev transportation.
Using Applied Levitation’s no-contact Stabilized Permanent Magnet (“SPM”) levitation system it will permit incremental upgrade of current rail and subway systems. By installing SPM guideways on the same ties as existing tracks, with one maglev rail outside each of the existing steel rails and a motor rail down the center, SPM maglev vehicles can operate simultaneously with standard rail and subway vehicles. As a result, existing rail and subway cars can remain in operation while being gradually replaced with new maglev vehicles that cost less and perform far better. This capability avoids the need to completely overhaul current infrastructure at tremendous cost.
The FASTRANSIT system is a packet-switching transportation network that uses permanent magnetic levitation and linear motors for instant switching and direct routing on an ultra-high capacity network. The system can be used for mass transit, freight transport or personal rapid transit.
Some of the proposed benefits of this system are:
- Low capital cost–SPM maglev guideways can be built, mile for mile, for about the same cost as one lane of freeway with twenty times the carrying capacity.
- Easily integrated–Existing rail and subway systems can be easily retrofitted with SPM maglev capabilities, enabling incremental upgrades of an aging infrastructure.
- Fast switching–SPM maglev technology uses instant magnetic switching with no moving parts which enables more efficient routing of computer-controlled maglev vehicles.
- Network capability (Mag-NetTM)–With SPM maglev technology and instant magnetic switching, transportation networks can be developed to route traffic in much the same way as information is routed over the internet.
- Highly scalable–SPM maglev technology can be used with smaller, lighter vehicles for more efficient passenger transportation, or with bigger, heavier vehicles for the transport of freight.
The firms have already tested the system on a scale and a short indoor track, and is now planning a quarter mile outdoor track.
Maglev rails have been built and tested since about 1980 and a few high speed maglev railways are in operation, most famously the one between downtown Shanghai and Pudong International Airport. The California University of Pennsylvania is currently investigating an urban maglev system (not with SPM technology) for its campus.
Ice Energy to lower peak demand
April 19, 2010 by Dirk Visser
Filed under innovation
The Southern California Public Power Authority and Ice Energy are launching a project to shift 53 megawatts of peak-time power consumption to hours of lower demand by deploying units that make and use ice to run air conditioners.Founded seven years ago, Ice Energy developed its Ice Bear Distributed Energy Storage System to work with standard rooftop air conditioning units on small to midsized commercial buildings.
At night, when demand on the grid is low, the Ice Bear goes in to “ice charging” mode, freezes 450 gallons of water and stores it. During the day when the grid reaches peak demand levels, typically between noon and 6 p.m., the Ice Bear goes into “ice cooling” mode. It takes over from the air conditioner’s energy-intensive compressor and cools the hot refrigerant using the ice made the night before. The cooling cycle lasts at least six hours until the ice completely melts, at which point the AC compressor goes back on the job and the ice making and cooling cycles begin again.
Installation for SCPPA will begin in the first half of the year and rolling deployment will take about two years. About 1,500 government, commercial and industrial buildings — retrofits and some new construction — will be involved.
The power authority and the company say that the project will permanently reduce demand peak electricity demand and, when complete, can shift as much as 64 gigawatt hours of on-peak consumption to off-peak times annually. The power authority estimates that the shift can offset enough peak demand to serve the equivalent of 10,000 homes.
The system costs about $2000 per kilowatt of capacity
For utilities, energy storage systems are considered key Smart Grid components because of their capacity to store energy efficiently and dispatch it when and where needed. Ice Energy said they have tested the technology with 20 utilities in the United States and Canada and they are looking forward to other major projects.
Original article: GreenerBuilding staff. 27 January 2010. Read more…
Concentrating solar power with a Stirling engine
April 19, 2010 by Dirk Visser
Filed under innovation
In January 2010, Teserra Solar and Stirling Engine Systems showcased the Maricopa Solar plant in Arizona. This is the first commercial project for the SunCatcher concentrating solar power technology designed and manufactured by Stirling Engine Systems.The innovative and highly-efficient SES SunCatcher is a 25-kilowatt solar power system which uses a 38-foot, mirrored parabolic dish combined with an automatic tracking system to collect and focus the sun’s energy onto a Stirling engine to convert the solar thermal energy into grid-quality electricity. Developer Tessera Solar has created a 1.5 megawatt power plant out of 60 SunCatcher solar thermal devices.
SunCatcher has a number of advantages including the highest solar-to-grid electric efficiency, zero water use for power production, a modular and scalable design, low capital cost, and minimal land disturbance. SunCatcher was designed and developed in America, through a public-private partnership with the U.S. Department of Energy. The SunCatchers unveiled at Maricopa Solar were manufactured and assembled in North America, mostly in Michigan by automotive suppliers.
Now that the plant is up, Stirling will be able to compare the results its gets from its Stirling engines from heliostat prototype power plants erected by eSolar in Southern California and BrightSource Energy in Israel as well as parabolic trough systems that have already been commercially deployed. Parabolic companies, BrightSource and eSolar collect solar heat on mirrors and use it to heat fluid. The warmth causes the fluid to expand, which creates pressure that gets exploited to crank a turbine.
The Company has publicly quoted a fully-installed cost for grid-scale plants of $2.8 million per megawatt.
Peter Willis – The importance of a Sustainability Strategy
March 23, 2010 by Dirk Visser
Filed under podcast, thought leadership
Peter Willis, the South African Director of Cambridge Programme for Sustainability Leadership, was recently interviewed by Chris Whitfield for GIBS FN. They spoke about the importance of a sustainability strategy.
“Actually the way we frame it is we are talking about the sustainabilty of the human project.”
Click here to download Part 1 of the interview (audio or video). Part 2, download here.
Jo da Silva – Built environment brokering the relationship between people and planet
March 10, 2010 by Dirk Visser
Filed under podcast, videos
Major emmitters set carbon goals post Copenhagen
February 3, 2010 by Dirk Visser
Filed under policy
The Copenhagen Accord that was negotiated on the last few days of the Copenhagen Summit in December ’09, set a 31 January deadline for countries to commit to national targets for curbs in emissions until 2020.
The UN recently announced that fifty five countries, responsible for almost 80% of world greenhouse gas emissions have pledged various goals to combat climate change.
Most countries, including China and the US, mostly reiterated commitments unveiled prior to the COP 15 in Denmark. These include:
- President Obama’s plans for a 17% cut in US emissions from 2005 levels or 4% cut from 1990 levels.
- The European Union’s goal of a 20% cut from 1990 levels or 30% if other nations step up.
- China’s “endeavour” to cut carbon intensity (carbon produced per unit of economic output) by 40%-45% from 2005 levels
- South Africa’s commitment to a 34% reduction below business as usual
Jennifer Morgan of the World Resources Institute commented: “Following a month of uncertainty, it is now clear that the Copenhagen Accord will support the world in moving forward to meaningful global action on climate change.”
According to Yvo de Boer, head of the UNFCCC, “greater ambition is required to meet the scale of the challenge. But I see these pledges as clear signals of willingness to move negotiations towards a successful conclusion.”
South Africa announced its pledge of 34% emission reduction below business as usual by 2020 and 42% by 2025 in early December. This would enable South Africa’s emissions to peak between 2020 and 2025, stabilize for 10 years and then decline in absolute terms. The business as usual ‘baseline’ is as per the government’s Long Term Mitigation Scenarios.
Original article: Mail & Guardian. 3 February 2009. Read here…
‘Green Tax’ on imported vehicles to be implemented
January 18, 2010 by Dirk Visser
Filed under policy
South Africa’s National Treasury has confirmed that they intend to go ahead with the implementation of a carbon emission tax on imported vehicles from the 1st of March 2010.
The tax will be levied at the following rates:
- 8% on vehicles emitting greenhouse gasses of 240 grams per kilometre
- 10,7% on 280 grams per kilometre
- 12% on 300 grams per kilometre
- 0% for emissions of less than 120 grams per kilometre.
These taxes will be partly offset by a reduction in the import duties of vehicles.
There is big unhappiness from the National Association of Automobile Manufacturers of SA (NAAMSA) about the tax, partly because the fuel sold in South Africa does not comply with the new technological requirements necessary to avoid the green tax.Importers are aware of this shortcoming in South Africa’s fuel and subsequently do not fit the vehicles with the latest technology.
About R40bn will have to be invested in local refineries to make production of cleaner fuel possible. Once a final decision has been taken on the issue it will take about another five years before the fuel will be available across the market.
Original article: Fin24.com on 17 January 2010. Read here…
Joule Solar Fuel
November 12, 2009 by Dirk Visser
Filed under innovation
While producing biofuels from feedstock has drawn heavy criticism, much money and research is being put into next generation biofuels. The world’s largest oil company, Exxon Mobil, that has shunned other forms of renewable energy, has poured billions into next generation biofuel R&D.
One of the most exciting innovations in this field is Joule, a Massachusetts based company.
Joule produces biofuels by mimicking photosynthesis. Their SolarConverter, that facilitates the production process, contains a mixture of brackish water, nutrients, and genetically engineered organisms. Carbon dioxide gas is fed into the mixture, and the device is designed to expose the organisms in the mixture to the sun. The organisms are photosynthetic, meaning that they absorb light energy and carbon dioxide to form compounds. Joule has engineered its organisms to secrete ethanol and hydrocarbons and chemicals.
The organisms mimic photosynthesis and uses sunlight and carbon dioxide to produce liquid fuels and chemicals. According to the company they can produce up to 20 000 gallons (75 700 litre) per acre per year. They are also price competitive with oil at around US $50 per barrel.
Cellulosic biofuels made from wood or grass and algae-based methods reduce water and land needs, but they are currently more expensive than fossil fuels or have yet to become commercially viable.
Another company doing similar work to Joule is Amyris. Amyris uses synthetic biology to create microbes that metabolize sugar and churn out long hydrocarbon chains that are better known as diesel fuel.
Original article: Kevin Bullis. Technology Review. 27 July 2009. Read more…

