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Einstein`s No Electricity/No Freon Fridge Revived at Oxford

Posted by Ovidiu Sandru on September 21, 2008 | RSS |

It seems like Einstein did his best not only in quantum physics, but also in classic, immediately-helpful science. Back in the 1930s, helped by his friend Leo Szilard, he invented a refrigerator that used no electricity at all. Scientists from Oxford are struggling to revive his invention today. Modern refrigerators are working on the principle on contraction and expansion of the freon. We all have freon in our fridges. Its a synthesized gas, causing greenhouse effects worse than CO2. Its said that the refrigerator is one of the most important invention of the 20th century, since it stopped the spread of infectious diseases caused by rotten food worldwide. So there are more and more refrigerators being used, then dumped, and their freon going into the upper layers of the atmosphere, causing greenhouse effects.[ad#co-3] Malcolm McCulloch, an electrical engineer from Oxford, whose passions are green technologies, is leading a project to revive Einsteins invention and other lost-and-found inventions that require no electricity to make our lives better. Einstein and Szilards fridge used only pressurized ammonia, butane and water to keep the things cool. Their invention was used in the early refrigerators, then it was dropped once the technology evolved and more efficient freon compressors have been used since the 1950s. The main principle behind it is that the water boils at lower temperatures when the surrounding air pressure is lower. For example, if you go on a mountain, youll see the difference between the boiling point from there and the boiling point from your home (or the sea altitude). If you live on a mountain, then youre lucky youll boil your eggs faster in the morning.

McCulloch describes the device rebuilt by him. At one side is the evaporator, a flask that contains butane gas. If you introduce a new vapour above the butane, the liquid boiling temperature decreases and, as it boils off, it takes energy from the surroundings to do so. Thats what makes it cold, he says. But the fridge developed by Einstein and Szilard was inefficient with that times technology, so the producers passed on to using freon gas and compressors. McCulloch, on the other hand, believes that by modifying the design and replacing the gas types he uses, he will be able to obtain 4 times Einsteins efficiency. Going a little bit further, he wants to insert a solar powered heat pump (to be green). No moving parts is a real benefit because it can carry on going without maintenance. This could have real applications in rural areas, he says. Other researchers, working at Cambridge, got the idea of cooling without adding extra energy by using magnetic fields. Our fridge works, from a conceptual point of view, in a similar way (to freon fridges) but instead of using a gas we use a magnetic field and a special metal alloy. When the magnetic field is next to the alloy, its like compressing the gas, and when the magnetic field leaves, its like expanding the gas. This effect can be seen in rubber bands when you stretch the band it gets hot, and when you let the band contract it gets cold. said managing director Neil Wilson. We had an article earlier this year reporting that a crew from Denmark was able to do that in practice. But Einstein/Szillard/McCullochs invention is still in a study process, and it is at this point far from being commercialized (as he says). Its still a promise to keep our eyes on and a very interesting alternative that we never thought would exist! He says Give us another month and well have it working. There are still a lot of things that we take for granted as they are and dont do a thing to improve them. And if we dont do that, and invent good things above relatively bad ones, what do we get? Evolution? No. All we get is a sand castle thats going to fall soon.

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