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Body Heat Energy Generation

BuzzSkyline writes "Researchers in Belgium have developed devices to harvest the waste heat our bodies throw off in order to convert it to electricity to run devices such as a wristband blood oxygen sensor and an electrocardiogram shirt. As a side benefit, the power sources help cool you down and keep you looking cool, all while running sundry micropower devices. In fact, the researchers mention that the energy harvesting head band works so well that it can get uncomfortably cold. In that case, they say, 'This problem is solved in exactly the same way as someone solves it on the body level in cold weather: a headgear should be worn on top of the system to limit the heat flow and make it comfortable.' But it would be such a shame to cover up the golden heat-harvesting headband with a hat."

7 of 214 comments (clear)

  1. not usually how it works by v1 · · Score: 5, Informative

    As a side benefit, the power sources help cool you down

    Typically if you take something that's trying to dump waste heat, and install something that recovers power from that heat, it creates an insulating effect, reducing the cooling the object was receiving. Heat can't be turned directly into energy, only difference in heat. Adding a heat reclamation system doesn't help cool something down because the power it's getting is from the temperature difference, not the heat itself. Instead it takes power from the temperature gradient, and as such reduces the temperature gradient, thus reducing cooling efficiency.

    --
    I work for the Department of Redundancy Department.
    1. Re:not usually how it works by JerryLove · · Score: 4, Informative

      Yes. Power is generated when heat is moved from an area of high concentration (your head) to an area of low concentration (the air).

      If the device facilitates that transfer in order to get more energy from it; then it would indeed cool you down. It requires only tha the headband be more effective at radiating heat than your skin is.

  2. Re:Bullshit by jdunn14 · · Score: 4, Informative

    I was going to just mod you down, but the summary at least never said anything about lowering any part of the device below ambient. It said that the headband will "feel cold". Touch a piece of wood at room temperature. It will sometimes "feel" warm. Do the same thing with a piece of steel. It will "feel" cold. This is true even if both are at the exact same temperature. Heat conduction

    The kids section of my local science museum even has hand-shaped pieces of different materials to demonstrate the effect.

  3. Re:Cold? by Issarlk · · Score: 5, Informative

    The headband is at ambiant temperature, but your body is much warmer. Heat flow from your body to the headband and leaves a cold sensation on your skin. The material of the headband applied to the body is probably a good conductor of heat ; it's like with a piece of metal that feels cold to the touch and a piece of wood that doesn't while both are at room temperature.

  4. Blue Smarties. . . by Fantastic+Lad · · Score: 4, Informative

    Though perhaps they won't need massive amounts of force to subdue humanity; from what I've seen, most people would choose the blue pill.

    I've long believed that the physical reality we live in, being entirely a product of energy and thus little more than an illusion, the idea of matter and as such is inherently linked to consciousness. . , that all things in our reality can be observed as and understood to be metaphors for systems and conflicts we are experiencing in our conscious awareness.

    -You have to plug humans into the Matrix at the start of their lives when kids are most inquisitive. Red Smarties are the most popular color, and the battle over Blue Smarties rages on. . !

    In 2006 it was announced that Nestlé were removing all artificial colourings from Smarties in the UK, owing to consumer concerns over the effect of chemical dyes on children's health. Nestlé decided to replace all synthetic dyes with natural ones, but as they were unable to source a natural blue dye, the blue Smarties were removed from circulation, and white Smarties were introduced in their place. White Smarties were later removed from the range, and blue Smarties were re-introduced in the UK in February 2008, using a natural blue dye derived from the cyanobacteria spirulina.

    Dieticians [...] said that the blue coloring was the one which was most likely to cause intolerance in kids. "The thing about blue is there are no natural equivalents. All the others can be obtained from natural sources," said Linda Hodge, a dietitian. "I believe the Brilliant Blue causes the worst symptoms of chemical intolerances."

    She added that when consumers are being tested for intolerances, the first color tried out is yellow. "When we are trying to determine if a person is sensitive to food coloring, we test them first on yellow. If there is no reaction we then use red, then blue. We don't start off with blue because it is a the strongest color and gives the worst reactions," she observed.

    Humans naturally try to reject the Matrix. "Entire crops were lost."

    Neat, huh?

    -FL

    1. Re:Blue Smarties. . . by OglinTatas · · Score: 4, Funny

      Humans naturally try to reject the Matrix. "Entire crops were lost."

      I don't reject the Matrix so much as I reject The Matrix 2 and 3.

  5. Re:Truely Fremen fashion by camperdave · · Score: 4, Funny

    As for me, electricity costs are getting so high that a human sized hamster wheel attached to a basic generator coil looks really attractive right now.

    Of course, the problems involved in acquiring and caring for a human sized hamster tend to outweigh the benefits.

    --
    When our name is on the back of your car, we're behind you all the way!