Battery recycling to become $10 billion business in 2015

Posted by: admin  :  Category: Semiconductor Industry
TAIPEI, TAIWAN: It is convenient to use batteries in electrical appliances but environmentalists are more concerned about its environmental impacts. Now, www.energy.com.tw discovers that battery related applications will launch the business opportunity of battery recycling, which is estimated to reach a 10 billion dollar market in 2015.

A battery is never big. Small as it is, a dry cell buried in the earth will influence up to a square meter area. Our annual consumption of batteries has caused enormous damages to the earth. Also, metals and organic solutions contained in the battery are harmful to the human health. The impact on the human body depends on the metals.

According to www.energy.com.tw, methyl mercury biotransformed from mercury does great harm to central nervous system. Once absorbed into the human body, the metal lead is hard to leave and will affect and hurt the working of the human nerve system, kidney and circulatory system. As for cadmium, it is easy to cause emphysema, osteoporosis as well as liver diseases.

Therefore, for the sake of environmental protection and human health, consumers and battery manufacturers must work hard together to recycle batteries so that we cannot only enjoy an endless power supply but also do our bit for the environmental protection of the earth.

On the industry side, companies need to pay attention to environmental requirements from global governments, the recycling cost of used batteries and reusable materials. Although the above-mentioned elements add costs for electric car makers, new business opportunities also rise.

Professor settles with Mitsubishi in LED/LD patent dispute

Posted by: admin  :  Category: Semiconductor Industry
NEW YORK, USA: Prof. Gertrude Neumark Rothschild has reached a settlement with Mitsubishi Corp. regarding her assertion that the company and dozens of other major electronics manufacturers in Asia and Europe violated her patents for producing light emitting diodes and laser diodes in products, such as video players that are used for Sony’s Blu-ray format, Motorola Razr phones and Hitachi camcorders, backlighting for computers, as well as street lighting and optical storage of information.

Mitsubishi is the latest company to reach a global settlement with Rothschild, a professor emeritus at Columbia University. Others who have settled include BenQ, Dalien Lumei, Epistar Corp., FOREPI, Guangzhou Hongli, Hitachi, Hugo Optotech, LG, Motorola, Pioneer Corp., Samsung Electro Mechanics, Samsung Electronics, Sanyo Electric, Sewa Electric, Sharp Corp., Shenzhen Unilight, Showa Denko, Sony Corp., and Sony Ericcson. Earlier settlements were made with Nichia Chemical and Koninklijke Philips Electronics, which included Philips Lumilid Lighting Co. and Toyoda Gosei Co. Ltd.

Terms of the Mitsubishi agreement are confidential, according to Rothschild’s attorney, Albert Jacobs Jr. of Troutman Sanders LLP. However, the aggregate received from her settlements and licenses — which now have been concluded with more than 40 companies — amounts to over $27 million, Jacobs said.

“Dr. Rothschild made a seminal breakthrough in the production of LEDs and LDs, especially the blue, violet and ultraviolet LEDs that are essential to a wide variety of consumer electronics products today,” said Jacobs. “She richly deserves both scientific as well as commercial recognition for her work.”

Prof. Rothschild, who is the sole owner of US Patent Number 5,252,499, as well as the recently expired ‘618 patent and foreign patents related thereto, is currently Howe Professor Emeritus of Materials Science and Engineering at Columbia.

She conducted ground-breaking research in the 1980s and 1990s into the electrical and optical properties of so-called wide band-gap semiconductors. This research has proven pivotal in the development of short-wavelength emitting (blue and violet) diodes that are now widely used in consumer electronics.

She was issued two US patents in the early 1990s that cover methods of producing wide band-gap semiconductors for LEDs and LDs. Such LEDs and LDs have become increasingly popular in a variety of devices as a superior lighting source because of their reduced power consumption, greater reliability, longevity and greater storage capacity.

Recognized by the American Physical Society as a Notable Woman Physicist in 1998, Professor Rothschild was elected as a Fellow of the American Physical Society in 1982.

Prof. Rothschild began her research career in private industry, working with Sylvania Research Laboratories in Bayside, N.Y., in the 1950s, and later at Philips Laboratories in Briarcliff Manor, N.Y. She joined the faculty at Columbia University as a Professor of Materials Science in 1985. In 2008, she was selected as a recipient of Barnard College’s Distinguished Alumna Award. She has published approximately 90 research articles and given 28 invited talks since 1980.

Forbes finds 79 Billionaires in China

Posted by: admin  :  Category: Technology

Earlier in the year Forbes Mar 2009 list of world billionaires only found 28 Chinese Billionaires. The economic crisis is easing, particularly in China, so the net worth of Chinese billionaires is better than earlier in the year,

Here is a link to the Forbes March 2009 list of world billionaires by country

 

 


Second Day of the Space Elevator Beaming Contest

Posted by: admin  :  Category: Technology
No new successful runs in day 2. Day 2 has been completed. We have lasermotive as the only team with successful prize level 1 runs in the 2 meter/second to 5 meter/second range. They had day one speed of 3.73 meters/second.

Thu, Nov 05 2009
6:43:48 AM PST:
Good morning. First up today: USST. That will complete Round 1. Live at http://ustre.am/4mZA
6:45:06 AM PST:
Round 2 starts immediately after Round 1. Teams will run in this order: First LaserMotive, then KCSP then USST. Live at http://ustre.am/4mZA
USST (University of Saskatchewan Space Team) ran unsuccesfully for their first two attempts. Round 1 closed.

9:58:32 PST:
Getting ready for Round 2. First up is LaserMotive. Let’s hope for a 5 m/s run! Live at http://ustre.am/4mZA
10:08:54 PST:
Let’s hope for a 5 m/s run from LaserMotive!
Live at http://ustre.am/4mZA

Lasermotive twitter feed

11:15 PM PST
3 runs completed. [Lasermotive] Did not go fast enough for 5 m/s [during their second round runs]


View from Lasermotive Trailer after their second round runs. Helicopter is landing and cable is being brought down

Next up University of Saskatchewan (USST) and then Kansas Pirates for round 2.

21:46:37 PST:
USST has passed on their turn. KCSP has until 2:00pm to start their run.

USST’s climber had overheating problems.

2:20:52 PM PST:
Hey #SEGames Looks like KCSP is ready to go! (Space Elevator Games live › http://ustre.am/4mZA)
2:21:39 PM PST:
Looks like KCSP is ready to go for another try…

Space Elevator Games Live coverage console is linked to here

Yesterday Lasermotive qualified for the $900,000 prize for going faster than 2 meters per second (but not past 5 meters per second for even more money) over the 1000 meter cable

The official speed was 3.72 meters per second for Lasermotives best run on Nov 4, 2009.

Official results for day one

Lasermotive: Unofficial empty weight is 4.8 kg. The unofficial payload is 0.58 kg. So the score, unofficial, is (speed times payload ratio) 3.7 * 0.58 / 4.8 = 0.45. If other teams make it into the $900k bracket, the scores will be used to determine the order of the winnings.

Kansas City Space Pirates also climbed, but a lot slower, getting to 850 m at 8:00, where we had to stop them due to a satellite lasing window closing. They were still moving when we shut them down, and their average speed was approximately 1.875 m/s.

Today’s Schedule is promising to be very exciting:

USST will go first, since they didn’t get a climb window yesterday.
LM will go next, and will sure be trying to get into the 5 m/s bracket, for the larger prize purse.
USST will then get their second climb window, and lastly
KCSP will get their second climb window and try to improve their performance.

 

 


Inertial MEMS accelerometers That are 1000 Times more Sensitive will benefit applications such as bridge, infrastructure and seismic monitoring

Posted by: admin  :  Category: Technology
HP today announced new inertial sensing technology that enables the development of digital micro-electro-mechanical systems (MEMS) accelerometers that are up to 1,000 times more sensitive than high-volume products currently available.

A MEMS accelerometer is a sensor that can be used to measure vibration, shock or change in velocity. By deploying many of these detectors as part of a complete sensor network, HP will enable real-time data collection, management evaluation and analysis. This information empowers people to make better, faster decisions, and take subsequent action to improve safety, security and sustainability for a range of applications, such as bridge and infrastructure health monitoring, geophysical mapping, mine exploration and earthquake monitoring.

The HP sensing technology enables a new class of ultrasensitive, low-power MEMS accelerometers. Up to 1,000 times more sensitive than high-volume, commercial products, sensors based on this technology can achieve noise density performance in the sub 100 nano-g per square root Hz range to enable dramatic improvements in data quality. The MEMS device can be customized with single or multiple axes per chip to meet individual system requirements.

The sensing technology is a key enabler of HP’s vision for a new information ecosystem, the Central Nervous System for the Earth (CeNSE). Integrating the devices within a complete system that encompasses numerous sensor types, networks, storage, computation and software solutions enables a new level of awareness, revolutionizing communication between objects and people.

“With a trillion sensors embedded in the environment – all connected by computing systems, software and services – it will be possible to hear the heartbeat of the Earth, impacting human interaction with the globe as profoundly as the Internet has revolutionized communication,” said Peter Hartwell, senior researcher, HP Labs.