Microchip Powered by Body Heat 73
An anonymous reader writes "MIT and Texas Instruments researchers have designed a chip that they say could be up to 10 times more energy efficient than current technology. The chip's power consumption is so low that devices with the chip may even be able to be recharged using the owner's body heat." The intent is to use these in medical applications like pacemakers where one would expect to have the free power source.
Powered by heat? (Score:4, Interesting)
1. If it's powered by your body heat, it's going to make you colder...
2. Don't you need a temperature _gradient_ to get useful power out of heat?
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Re:Powered by heat? (Score:4, Insightful)
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Thermopower from bimetalic contacts definitely requires a cold junction to generate power.
If you are talking about a consumable chemical reaction, then all you have is a battery. It is true that chemical reactions often go faster at elevated temperatures, but that is not the same thing.
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A wind turbine requires a temperature gradient to operate, which is what generates wind in the first place.
Please see the second law of thermodynamics, the first law of thermodynamics, and Maxwell's demon.
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Anthrogeneration (Score:1)
One proposal is to use microscopic plates separated by orthogonally arranged nanotubes. Connected to one plate and touching small feelers on the other, they would function as a piezoelectric generator for exploiting ambient motion. The idea is to apply this to similar applications as in TFA.
As far as using body heat as an RTG [wikipedia.org], the idea is of course to use the temperature gradient between the body and the amb
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Re:Powered by heat? (Score:4, Insightful)
2. No, chemical reactions that are endothermic will occur at any temperature that supplies the necessary activation energy to the physical reagents.
Hope I didn't sound like an elitist snob...
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But unless you have a source of new reactants, and a place to dump your product, your reaction will soon reach chemical equilibrum.
Essentially that is a battery.
You really need some sort temperature gradient to convert body temperature into work. I do not see how a device inside the body could do that with any efficiency.
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What, you mean like the bloodstream, which supplied readily combustible sugar and carries away the products of glucose reactions?
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Beyond current technology... (Score:2)
But actually, I don't see why someone hasn't developed an ATP (?) powered circuit! All you need is a cathode with an enzyme or catalyst that breaks apart sugars and steals their electrons, and any kind of anode. Given the current state of molecular engineering - and certainly cell tinkering - this should be almost easy!
Obviously this has already been buried by Big Oil, along with the Free Energy device, test-tube Cold Fusion, and the Perpetual Stirling Engine.
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So this bot would have to drill into fresh cells and suck them out.
If it was not for the pain thing, and the difficulty in getting it into cells, I would market an ATP energy drink.
Guaranted to give you back energy instantly, whitout any sugars and fats!
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Then you think wrong. How you "feel" about the temperature is not relevant to the actual temperature. Furthermore, my point was that the body generates huge amounts of heat, the use of which will not affect the body adversely.
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Considering how much of your body is devoted to getting rid of excess heat (skin and sweat glands) I don't see this as a bad thing.
2. Don't you need a temperature _gradient_ to get useful power out of heat?
It never hurts to exercise.
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If you turn down the thermostat on your central heating it's going to make you colder...
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Implantable devices running off body heat? (Score:2)
Just wondering...
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But i am a cold hearted bastard (Score:5, Funny)
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Oh wait cool, sorry about that didn't mean to be all cold.
Oh wait cold... I'll just shut up now...
Dupe! (Score:5, Informative)
It might work... (Score:5, Funny)
"The chip's power consumption is so low that devices with the chip may even be able to be recharged using the owner's body heat."
Except, probably, my ex. She'd have to to crawl up onto a rock and bask for a couple of hours before something like that would work for her.
cochlear implants ... (Score:5, Interesting)
And with a generation rapidly driving themselves deaf via iPods, a technological solution like this would seem to be appropriate and is arriving just in time.
While I don't know what kind of voltages and currents a pacemaker uses to regulate heart activity, it would seem a lot more likely that a cochlear implant would use less. Plus, there's a lot less downside risk if the device malfunctions.
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Until the device (probably the battery) explodes in your skull.
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In the old days pacemakers used a plutonium powered thermoelectric battery. This lasted forever, or about 25,000 years to be precise. They are now banned in the US because of the danger that the plutonium could be released in some way, such as a plane crash, a gunshot wound, or crematorium . They actually had to dig up some bodies because the undertaker did not remove the battery.
Haven't we all seen this movie? (Score:5, Funny)
Lord Kelvin to the Rescue (Score:2)
Right, but unlike in that movie we have the laws of thermodynamics to protect us.
I love The Matrix, but science was not its strong point.
Meet your pacemaker (Score:1)
What is the Matrix? (Score:1)
_Third_ time (Score:1)
Masturbation power cell, here we come (Score:1)
Hardcore Overclocking... (Score:1)
Wow, a dupe of the dupe... Grand-dupe? (Score:3, Informative)
This research has been covered at least twice on Slashdot recently:
Researchers Design Microchip Ten Times More Efficient [slashdot.org]
Low Voltage Is Key To Energy-Efficient Chip [slashdot.org]
Maybe those should be included as related articles in the summary, or something...
Perfect! (Score:1)
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Not gonna fly, basic thermodynamics (Score:2)
You can't effectively harvest body heat. The efficiency of any heat engine is proportional to the temperature drop, in absolute degrees. The internal body temperature gradient is unlikely to be much more than a degree Farenheit. So any heat engine in the body is limited to an absolute best efficiency of under a quarter of a percent. And you'd have to find some working fluid that changes phase across that temperature range. Not very likely. You co
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The same should hold true for the lower legs - the body surely has to expend at lea
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