October 20, 2004

Micro Turbines to Power your PDA

Some very interesting work done by the MIT group on making MEMs turbines. They don't yet work, but all of the parts do. The article is full of interesting details, and is highly recommended.

microturbine.jpg Epstein started thinking about building a jet engine on a chip nearly a decade ago. At the time, microelectromechanical systems (MEMS) were picking up speed. Techniques had emerged for carving new types of features into the surfaces of slabs of silicon, including sealed chambers and pipes and moving parts like spinning wheels—most of the parts needed for a gas turbine engine. Less clear at first was what one would do with a miniature fuel-burning engine. “We thought we’d be able to get the cost way down if we could figure out a reason for needing a lot of them,” says Epstein. “But the only thing we could see doing with tiny engines was flying tiny airplanes, and that seemed stupid. Of course, we hadn’t counted on the DoD.”

Sure enough, the U.S. military was suddenly gung ho over the idea of 15-centimeter-long planes that could carry small cameras for surveillance. The engineers at Epstein’s lab were somewhat less enthusiastic; they suspected that getting jet chips that were airworthy would take a couple of decades. Then Epstein latched onto a more immediate military need: freeing soldiers from the batteries that many of them have to lug around to power radios, GPS receivers, night-vision goggles, and other gadgets. And unlike a miniature aircraft engine, a battery-replacing jet chip would have enormous commercial potential.

Other materials scientists and engineers were already beginning to work on ways to shrink power-producing machines to supplement or replace batteries, creating a new field called “power MEMS.” The most popular approach involved shrinking fuel cells, which typically pass hydrogen through a membrane that pulls electrons out to create an electric current. But Epstein was convinced gas turbines were a better way to go, because of their unmatched ability to wring power out of hydrocarbon fuels. The technology becomes even more appealing where minimizing weight and volume is critical, as with portable devices. A jet chip would be at most half the size of a micro fuel cell of equal energy capacity. A gas turbine should also be relatively easy to fabricate, figured Epstein, because it could be built entirely out of silicon, using standard fabrication techniques.

Posted by elkaim at October 20, 2004 3:01 PM