Manufacturing Center

 

   
 
 Designfax Links
 Print Archives
 OEM Buyers Guide
 DFX Online
 Reader Service
 Subscriptions
 Manufacturing Ctr
 Events Calendar
 Associations
 News Center
 Reprints  
 Contact Us
 

By Stephanie Gooch

8507-705 University researchers at Berkeley are working on creating an internal combustion micro-engine running on liquid hydrocarbon fuel (butane, propane, etc.) to continuously produce watt-level power. The design of the proposed 1mm square microelectrical MEMS engine is based on the larger Wankel rotary engine, which appeared in some Mazda automobiles and is making a comeback in several concept cars. An intermediate-sized steel "mini rotary" prototype (shown) has successfully achieved 4 watts of electricity with a generating radius of 5.5mm and depth of 3.5mm, with a projected final power rating of 30 to 60 watts. The pinhead-sized micro rotary engine will be chemically etched out of a combination of thermally-resistant silicon, silicon carbide and polysilicon, using microprocessing technology. It will have a generating radius of 0.5mm and depth of 0.1mm, resulting in an engine displacement of 0.013 cubic mm (on the scale of about one-forty-thousandths of the smallest commercially-available rotary engine). One-thousandth of an ounce of fuel should be sufficient to run the mini-engine for two hours. Internal combustion engines have approximately 30 times greater energy density than premium batteries, and both the mini- and micro-engines would present an alternative power source in cell phones, digital cameras, laptops and similar portable devices. Circle 605 - University of California, Berkeley, Micro-Rotary Combustion Lab, or connect at http://www.OneRS.net/107df-605


8507-401The pizza delivery may have taken a little more than 30 minutes, but it was far from free... Jumping on the decades-old "space-race" bandwagon, Pizza Hut has succeeded in creating and delivering the first space-consumable fast-food pizza to cosmonauts on the International Space Station. Working with Russian food scientists, the company rigorously tested prototypes in Kazakhstan kitchens over the course of a year. The resulting Personal Pan-sized pizza fits in the tiny oven aboard the ISS. Pizzas were made with traditional sauce, cheese and crispy crust and then tested under rigorous stabilized thermal conditions, to determine whether the vacuum-sealed pizzas would stay fresh over a prolonged shelf-life. Since pepperoni did not stand up to the 60-day testing process, salami was chosen instead to liven up the flavor. Randy Gear, chief marketing officer for Pizza Hut, comments, "we're determined to give customers what they want, when they want it and where they want it, even if they are in space. Wherever there is life, there will be Pizza Hut pizza...After checking and re-checking the address, we made a few minor route adjustments to ensure that the pizza would successfully make it to the ISS." A giant leap for fast food, indeed. Circle 606 - Pizza Hut, or connect directly to their website at http://www.OneRS.net/107df-606

 

 
   

 

 
   
Would You Like A Reprint of An Article?
CLICK HERE!

 
Nelson LXI Connexion Designfax - Online 
Modern Applications News Tooling & Production

Designfax - Online
2500 Tamiami Trail N., Nokomis, FL 34275  Phone: 941-966-9521  Fax: 941-966-2590 
To request a media kit or back issues click here.
(US requests only)
Please report problems with this site to the Designfax - Online site manager.

Copyright © 2008 by Nelson Publishing, Inc.. All rights reserved. Reproduction Prohibited.
View our terms of use and privacy policy.