Engineers at Oregon State University have developed a prototype of new technology that has the potential of addressing one of the leading problems in energy use around the world today
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It would be able to use much of the waste heat either in cooling or the production of electricity.
"This could become a very important new energy source and way to improve energy efficiency," said Hailei Wang, a research associate in the School of Mechanical, Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering at OSU.
It is called a "thermally activated cooling system" that gains much of its efficiency by using extraordinarily small microchannels, which help to better meet the performance, size and weight challenges.
It effectively combines a vapor compression cycle with an "organic Rankine cycle," an existing energy conversion technology.
The OSU prototype succeeded in turning 80 percent of every kilowatt of waste heat into a kilowatt of cooling capability.
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The achievement has been published in the Applied Thermal Engineering, a professional journal.
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