IBM Models Human Blood System To Build Solar Power Prototype
coondoggie writes "IBM today said its researchers are developing a solar power system that concentrates solar radiation 2,000 times by using a human-blood supply modeled way of cooling and converting 80% of Sun's heat into useful energy. IBM says the system can also desalinate water and cool air in sunny, remote locations where such systems are often in short supply."
In other news, IBM is selling their new Blood Solar Division to Lenovo.
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causes rust accumulation on components, so they substituted with copper. And the green-blooded IBM became very cold and inhuman.
Actually, it applies to the function of blood to transfer excess heat out of the body. If you didn't have this function in your body, your insides would cook and your skin would be cold.
"When life gives you lemons, don't make lemonade. Make life take the lemons back!" -- Cave Johnson
A Cray 2 requires 200KW. The panels claim 80% efficiency, so you'd need 200/0.8 = 250KW. Sun intensity, ignoring atmosphere and with optimal panel orientation, is around 1.3KW/M^2. So you'd need 192 M^2 of panels. In practice you'd need space for panel orientation gear, plus atmospheric attenuation would reduce power, so you'd need rather more than that, but it's entirely practical. However, no running the Cray at night.
The Cray 2 had 1.3GF of floating-point processing power. A single i7 chip has 109GF, double-precision. The Cray 2 was without doubt one of the coolest looking computers ever built, but the technology is rather dated. You could comfortably emulate it on a modern desktop.
*European, not handegg.
This is really cool, pun intended, their cooling system really is similar to human blood flow (fractal capillary structure). See video here as the article just discusses the application to cooling solar cells (which is cool in its own right), but not how the cooling actually resembles bloodflow in humans.
Let me say I'm excited that IBM is building a Dyson sphere powered by human blood, first, to get 80% of the Sun's output is tremendously effective and secundly who knew the blueprints were somehow sitting in our DNA?
It comes at a surprise that IBM is so technologically advanced, now it ain't gonna easy to launch all that stuff and assemble it in heliocentric orbit.
[citation needed]
But let me help you with that, since most solar power advocates can't seem to wrap their heads around the fact that there is a physical limit to the amount of solar radiation that makes solar power a non-starter for baseload power generation:
Insolation article on Wikipedia
The relevant excerpt, with the critical information in bold:
So, 1.3 kW/m^2 if you can stick a solar panel at the top of the atmosphere and use a really long power cable; 1 kW/m^2 if you happen to be directly underneath the sun at sea level; but 0.25 kW/m^2 on average in general on non-cloudy days over all 24 hours - or, equivalently, 0.75 kW/m^2 per hour over 8 hours of reasonably direct sunlight.
You could comfortably emulate it on a modern desktop.
You could comfortably emulate it on a modern cellphone.
I like pointing this out to anyone who'll listen, today for a small monthly fee any cell company will GIVE you a device that 20 years ago would have cost millions of dollars.
XML is a known as a key material required to create SMD: Software of Mass Destruction