super soaker 470

Speaking more about solar energy conservation, with our technological development we can save only about 30% of solar energy into electricity. But here is good news! Lonnie Johnson, an independent inventor from Atlanta, of the Super Soaker Squirt Gun fame, claims to have developed a system to revolutionize solar power conservation. Holing over 100 patents, this nuclear engineer is on his way towards fame with this gun that can convert 60% of total solar energy to electricity with a new solid-state heat engine.

Unlike the photovoltaic energy, the Johnson Thermoelectric Energy Conversion System (JTEC), it doesn’t convert converts light into electricity with the help of silicon semi-conductors. The JTEC works on two membrane-electrode assemblies (MEA) holding hydrogen between them. Without any external oxygen or hydrogen, its only input is heat and sparks of like the internal-combustion engine. It doesn’t have any moving parts and ensures less maintenance cost.

The whole procedure depends on heating and pumping of hydrogen. One MEA is coupled with a high temperature heat source, while the other is kept in a heat sink of ambient temperature. The resulting pressure differential produces voltage across the MEA stack after getting jolts of electricity, with the high temperature stack acting as the power stage and the lower one as compressor stage. The pumping of hydrogen from the lower temperature to the higher stack with high voltage while maintaining the pressure differential generates power.

According to its inventor Johnson, JTEC is capable of working on tiny scales while generating megawatts of power. It will prove instrumental in reducing the over all cost of solar power. Now, even if it sounds a little too much, JTEC is powerful enough to generate electricity from even internal combustion engines and combustion turbines, and even from a human body.

Making toys with his technology, Johnson seems to have been interested in power conservation through out. With an environment-friendly bent of mind, Johnson’s is expecting to come up with a smaller proto type of his JTEC of about 200ºC within a year. Currently Johnson is working with Prof. Heshmat Aglan, Dept. Mechanical Engineering, Tuskegee University, Alabama

From toys to energy conversion, Johnson seems to be taking a great leap, knowing no bounds.

Via: Popular Mechanics