HERE'S HOW IT WORKS:
A palm-sized, cylinder-shaped resonator contains a stack of material with a
large surface area such as metal or plastic plates, or fibers made of glass, cotton
or steel wool. The material sits between a cold heat exchanger and a hot heat
exchanger. Applying heat to the device moves air and produces sound at a single
frequency, similar to air blown into a flute. Longer resonator cylinders produce lower tones, while shorter tubes produce higher-pitched tones. The sound waves then squeeze
a piezoelectric element that produces electric current.
Thermoacoustic prime movers lack moving parts, so
they will need little maintenance and last a long time.
Researchers say the devices won't create noise pollution. Smaller versions under development convert heat
to ultrasonic frequencies people cannot hear. Second,
sound volume goes down as sound converts to electricity. Finally, sound absorbers placed around devices easily
contain the noise.
SOME RESULTS OF PROTYPE TESTING:
A 1.5-in. long, 0.5-in. wide cylindrical resonator produces sound with as little as a 90°F temperature difference
between hot and cold heat exchangers. Some prototypes
produced sound at 135 dB — as loud as a jackhammer.
Pressurizing the air in a similar-sized resonator produces
more sound, and thus more electricity. Further, raising
air pressure lowers the temperature difference needed
between heat exchangers to produce sound. This makes
the acoustic devices practical for cooling laptop computers
and other electronics that emit relatively small amounts of
waste heat, researchers say.
For an array to efficiently convert heat to sound and electricity, its individual
devices must be "coupled" to produce the same frequency of sound and vibrate in sync.
A resonator made from a 0.25-in.-diameter steel tube bent to form a ring
about 1.3 in. across causes sound waves to circle through instead of bounce off
the ends as in a cylindrical design. Such ring-shaped resonators are twice as efficient as cylindrical resonators in converting heat into sound and electricity. This
is because pressure and speed of air in the ring shape remain synchronized.
Lastly, a cylinder-shaped prototype one-third the size of the other devices
(less than half the width of a penny) makes a high-pitched sound at 120 dB,
equivalent to the level produced by a siren or a rock concert.
Within a year, researchers plan to use the devices to produce electricity from
waste heat at a military radar facility and at the University's hot-water-generating plant.
Thermoacoustic prime movers may also serve as a portable power source
on the battlefield to run electronics, as an alternative to photovoltaic cells, or as
a way to generate electricity from heat that now escapes from nuclear-powerplant cooling towers.