HOLLOW
FLASHLIGHT
-Blog By Aafiya Hanafi (Final Year Student, Dept. of ETC, ACET, Nagpur)
Ann Makosinski is a 16-year-old
student who competed against thousands of other young inventors from around the
world to win first prize and a $25,000 scholarship at Google's International
Science Fair. She invented a battery-free flashlight. A free energy device that
is powered by the heat in your hand. While visiting the Philippines, Ann found
that many students couldn't study at home because they didn't have electricity
for lighting. Unfortunately, this is a common problem for developing regions
where people don't have access to power grids or can't afford the cost of
electricity.
Ann recalled
reading how the human body had enough energy to power a 100-watt light bulb. This
inspired her to think of how she could convert body heat directly into
electricity to power a flashlight. She knew that heated conductive material
causes electrons to spread outwards and that cold conductive material causes
electrons to condense inwards. So, if a ceramic tile is heated, and it's
pressed against a ceramic tile that is cool, then electrons will move from the
hot tile towards the cool tile producing a current. This phenomenon is known as
the thermoelectric effect.
Ann started
using ceramic tiles placed on top of each other with a conductive circuit
between them (known as Peltier tiles) to create the amount of electricity she
needed for her flashlight. Her idea was to design her flashlight so that when
it was gripped in your hand, your palm would come in contact with the topside
of the tiles and start heating them.
To ensure the
underside of the tiles would be cooler, she had the tiles mounted into a
cut-out area of a hollow aluminium tube. This meant that air in the tube would
keep the underside of her tiles cooler than the heated topside of the tiles.
This would then generate a current from the hot side to the cold side so that
light emitting diodes (LEDS) connected to the tiles would light-up. But
although the tiles generated the necessary wattage (5.7 milliwatts), Ann
discovered that the voltage wasn't enough. So she added a transformer to boost
the voltage to 5V, which was more than enough to make her flashlight work.
Ann successfully
created the first flashlight that didn't use batteries, toxic chemicals,
kinetic or solar energy, and that always works when you picked it up. She
credits her family for encouraging her interest in electronics and derives her
inspiration from reading about inventors such as Nikola Tesla and Marie Curie. She told judges at the Google
competition that her first toy was a box of transistors. Time Magazine listed
Ann as one of the 30 people under 30 who are changing the world. She is working
on bringing her flashlight to market and is also developing a headlamp based on
the same technology.
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