Reviews

MIT researchers developing a quarter-sized turbine engine.

MIT researchers have started putting entire gas-turbine engines on tiny silicon chips. With the help of some military funding, researchers have fashioned millimeter-sized compressors, combustion chambers and turbines and placed them on layers of silicon wafers. The new engines promise to run more than 10 times longer than batteries of the same weigh and could help lighten the load for future soldiers. Researchers from the school"s Gas Turbine, Microsystems Technology and Electromagnetic and Electronic Systems laboratories made the individual components, 60 to 100 at a time, from large wafers and then cut them apart. The components were then placed into a housing made of six stacked silicon wafers. Fuel is burned inside the combustion chamber which then turns the turbine blades at 20,000 RPM. So far all the parts work individually, but researchers hope to get a fully functional engine by the end of the year. The U.S. Army Research Laboratory is funding the project. Modern troops like to carry power-hungry laptops, GPS units, satellite telephones and radio transmitters. MIT"s research could help reduce battery weight.


Add your comment:
Name:
Site address: http://
Your message:
Enter today\\\\'s date, 2 digits
(spam protection):

News of the day
Super Talent Shows Its Super Fast PCIe SSD.
Super Talent had its RAIDdrive GS card on display and on demo at the show floor here at Computex.
Popular Articles

Intel Aiming To Almost Double Notebook CPU Shipments By 2011.
Intel plans to aggressively expand its shipments of notebook CPUs aiming to almost double its total of 2007 within the next few years, according to sources close to the company. Since Intel launched its Centrino platform in 2003, shipments have grown from 38 million notebook CPUs in the first year to 79 million in 2006.

Tamera Woessner Honored by Cambridge Who"s Who for Excellence in Security Systems
Ms. Woessner achieves Top Gun in in sales in 2006 and 2007