Westnet representatives Neil Wiese and David Knight have added to the impetus of their education campaign by partnering with GreenFreeze Technology, a company that was committed to good environmental and commercially economically sustainable practices, according to a company statement (29/8/2007). Read the rest of this entry »
Archive for the ‘Innovation’ Category
Hydrocarbon refrigerants as alternative to enviro-harmful HFCR134: easier, reliable and safer, says Westnet
Posted by electricityweek on September 27, 2007
Posted in Emissions, Innovation, Volume 4416 | Leave a Comment »
Prof’s new idea – ventilation systems based on pine-cones and Zimbabwe termite mounds in
Posted by electricityweek on September 24, 2007
“It’s the same principle as the chimney effect, but a bit more controlled,” says Professor George Jeronimidis, director of the Centre for Biomimetics at the University of Reading.
Posted in Energy Efficiency, Green Buildings, Innovation, Volume 4416 | Leave a Comment »
New lamp eliminates electrodes and mercury: its a small tube of of aluminium oxide, buzzed by microwaves, and four times more efficient than neon
Posted by electricityweek on September 17, 2007
Scientists working for Ceravision, a company based in Milton Keynes, in Britain, have designed a new form of lamp that eliminates the need for electrodes, reported The Economist (8/9/2007, p.4). Their device uses microwaves to transform electricity into light. It consists of a relatively small lump of aluminium oxide into which a hole has been bored, with a gas-capsule, inside. The lot is bombarded with microwaves generated from the same sort of device that powers a microwave oven. As electrons accelerate in the electric field, they gain energy that they pass on to the atoms and molecules of the gas as they collide with them, creating a glowing plasma. The resulting light is bright, and the process is energy-efficient.
Energy efficiency greater than 50 per cent: Indeed, whereas traditional light bulbs emit just 5 per cent of their energy as light, and fluorescent tubes about 15 per cent, the Ceravision lamp has an energy efficiency greater than 50 per cent. The lamp’s small size makes them compatible to light-emitting diodes but the new lamp generates much brighter light than those semiconductor devices do.
Cheap, and does not need mercury: A single microwave generator can be used to power several lamps. Another environmental advantage of the new design is that it does not need mercury, a highly toxic metal found in most of the bulbs used today, including energy-saving fluorescent bulbs, fluorescent tubes and high-pressure bulbs used in projectors. And Ceravision also reckons it should be cheap to make. With lighting accounting for some 20 per cent of electricity use worldwide, switching to a more efficient system could both save energy and reduce emissions of climate-changing greenhouse gases.
The Economist, 8/9/2007, p. 4
Posted in Innovation, Volume 4415 | Leave a Comment »