Close X
Thursday, November 28, 2024
ADVT 
Tech

Wireless cooling: Magnets to keep your fridge cool

Darpan News Desk IANS, 29 Jul, 2014 08:55 AM
  • Wireless cooling: Magnets to keep your fridge cool
Magnets may soon act as wireless cooling agents for your refrigerators, laptops and other devices if a theory propounded by researchers at Massachusetts Institute of Technology in the US finds application.
 
The theory describes the motion of magnons - quasi-particles in magnets that are collective rotations of magnetic moments, or "spins".
 
When exposed to a magnetic field gradient, magnons may be driven to move from one end of a magnet to another, carrying heat with them and producing a cooling effect, the study said.
 
"You can pump heat from one side to the other, so you can essentially use a magnet as a refrigerator," said Bolin Liao from MIT.
 
"You can envision wireless cooling where you apply a magnetic field to a magnet one or two metres away to, say, cool your laptop," Liao added.
 
In theory, such a magnetically driven refrigerator would require no moving parts, unlike conventional iceboxes that pump fluid through a set of pipes to keep things cool.
 
The theoretical results suggest that a first application for magnon cooling may be for scientists working on projects that require wireless cooling at extremely low temperatures.
 
The magnetic cooling effect identified by the group is "a highly useful theoretical framework for studying the coupling between spin and heat, and can potentially stimulate ideas of utilising magnons as a working 'fluid' in a solid-state refrigeration system", said Li Shi, a professor of mechanical engineering at the University of Texas at Austin who was not involved in the research.
 

 

The study detailing the magnon cooling theory appeared in the journal Physical Review Letters.

MORE Tech ARTICLES

180 Google satellites to bring entire planet online

180 Google satellites to bring entire planet online
When you are busy chatting or surfing the internet, do you know that nearly 4.8 billion people - or two-third of the world's population - are not yet online? This is going to change soon.

180 Google satellites to bring entire planet online

Japan home to world's most sophisticated toilets

Japan home to world's most sophisticated toilets
Japan is home to the world's most sophisticated toilets, with consumers being able to choose from gold-plated and aquarium-equipped models, as well as one commode that gives the user the feeling of being a ski jumper.

Japan home to world's most sophisticated toilets

Forget speed, this device can detect alcohol in moving cars

Forget speed, this device can detect alcohol in moving cars
Breath alcohol testers or breathalysers that traffic police use to check your bubbly quotient when you drive can soon be things of the past. No, don't feel excited yet.

Forget speed, this device can detect alcohol in moving cars

Soon, electric wires to charge your cars, phones

Soon, electric wires to charge your cars, phones
So far, electric cables have been used only to transmit electricity. But soon, you will be able to power your mp3 player, smartphone and electric car from cables that can store energy.

Soon, electric wires to charge your cars, phones

Why not copy-print humans on other planets?

Why not copy-print humans on other planets?
What if, instead of sending humans to other planets, we made an exact copy on the site and colonised other planets to ensure survival of the human race for eons?

Why not copy-print humans on other planets?

This Korean sprinter robot can beat Usain Bolt!

This Korean sprinter robot can beat Usain Bolt!
South Korean scientists have taken inspiration from the prehistoric Velociraptor dinosaur to create one of the world's simplest and fastest robots - the Raptor.

This Korean sprinter robot can beat Usain Bolt!