Smart devices will be becoming battery less soon!

on 15/11/2018

Researchers at the University of Waterloo (Canada) have taken a huge step towards making smart devices that do not use batteries or require charging.

These battery-free objects, which feature an IP address for internet connectivity, are known as Internet of Things (IoT) devices. If an IoT device can operate without a battery it lowers maintenance costs and allows the device to be placed in areas that are off the grid.

Many of these IoT devices have sensors in them to detect their environment, from a room’s ambient temperature and light levels to sound and motion, but one of the biggest challenges is making these devices sustainable and battery-free.

Professor Omid Abari, Postdoctoral Fellow Ju Wang and Professor Srinivasan Keshav from Waterloo’s Cheriton School of Computer Science have found a way to hack radio frequency identification (RFID) tags, the ubiquitous squiggly ribbons of metal with a tiny chip found in various objects, and give the devices the ability to sense the environment.

“It’s really easy to do,” said Wang. “First, you remove the plastic cover from the RFID tag, then cut out a small section of the tag’s antenna with scissors, then attach a sensor across the cut bits of the antenna to complete the circuit.”

In their stock form, RFID tags provide only identification and location. It’s the hack the research team has done — cutting the tag’s antenna and placing a sensing device across it — that gives the tag the ability to sense its environment.

To give a tag eyes, the researchers hacked an RFID tag with a phototransistor, a tiny sensor that responds to different levels of light.

By exposing the phototransistor to light, it changed the characteristics of the RFID’s antenna, which in turn caused a change in the signal going to the reader. They then developed an algorithm on the reader side that monitors change in the tag’s signal, which is how it senses light levels.

Among the simplest of hacks is adding a switch to an RFID tag so it can act as a keypad that responds to touch.

“We see this as a good example of a complete software-hardware system for IoT devices,” Abari said. “We hacked simple hardware — we cut RFID tags and placed a sensor on them. Then we designed new algorithms and combined the software and hardware to enable new applications and capabilities.

“Our main contribution is showing how simple it is to hack an RFID tag to create an IoT device. It’s so easy a novice could do it.”

The research paper by Wang, Abari and Keshav titled, Challenge: RFID Hacking for Fun and Profit-ACM MobiCom, appeared in the Proceedings of the 24th Annual International Conference on Mobile Computing and Networking, October 29-November 2, 2018, New Delhi, India, 461- 70.

Courtesy: Science Daily

Transforming carbon dioxide into industrial fuels

on 14/11/2018

Imagine a day when — rather than being spewed into the atmosphere — the gases coming from power plants and heavy industry are instead captured and fed into catalytic reactors that chemically transform greenhouse gases like carbon dioxide into industrial fuels or chemicals and that emit only oxygen.

It’s a future that Haotian Wang (China) says may be closer than many realize.

A Fellow at the Rowland Institute at Harvard, Wang and colleagues have developed an improved system to use renewable electricity to reduce carbon dioxide into carbon monoxide — a key commodity used in a number of industrial processes. The system is described in a November 8 paper published in Joule, a newly launched sister journal of Cell press.

“The most promising idea may be to connect these devices with coal-fired power plants or other industry that produces a lot of CO2,” Wang said. “About 20 percent of those gases are CO2, so if you can pump them into this cell…and combine it with clean electricity, then we can potentially produce useful chemicals out of these wastes in a sustainable way, and even close part of that CO2 cycle.”

The new system, Wang said, represents a dramatic step forward from the one he and colleagues first described in a 2017 paper in Chem.

Where that old system was barely the size of a cell phone and relied on two electrolyte-filled chambers, each of which held an electrode, the new system is cheaper and relies on high concentrations of CO2 gas and water vapor to operate more efficiently — just one 10-by-10-centimeter cell, Wang said, can produce as much as four liters of CO per hour.

The new system, Wang said, addresses the two main challenges — cost and scalability — that were seen as limiting the initial approach.

“In that earlier work, we had discovered the single nickel-atom catalysts which are very selective for reducing CO2 to CO…but one of the challenges we faced was that the materials were expensive to synthesize,” Wang said. “The support we were using to anchor single nickel atoms was based on graphene, which made it very difficult to scale up if you wanted to produce it at gram or even kilogram scale for practical use in the future.”

To address that problem, he said, his team turned to a commercial product that’s thousands of times cheaper than graphene as an alternative support — carbon black.

Using a process similar to electrostatic attraction, Wang and colleagues are able to absorb single nickel atoms (positively charged) into defects (negatively charged) in carbon black nanoparticles, with the resulting material being both low-cost and highly selective for CO2 reduction.

“Right now, the best we can produce is grams, but previously we could only produce milligrams per batch,” Wang said. “But this is only limited by the synthesis equipment we have; if you had a larger tank, you could make kilograms or even tons of this catalyst.”

The other challenge Wang and colleagues had to overcome was tied to the fact that the original system only worked in a liquid solution.

The initial system worked by using an electrode in one chamber to split water molecules into oxygen and protons. As the oxygen bubbled away, protons conducted through the liquid solution would move into the second chamber, where — with the help of the nickel catalyst — they would bind with CO2 and break the molecule apart, leaving CO and water. That water could then be fed back into the first chamber, where it would again be split, and the process would start again.

“The problem was that, the CO2 we can reduce in that system are only those dissolved in water; most of the molecules surrounding the catalyst were water,” he said. “There was only a trace amount of CO2, so it was pretty inefficient.”

While it may be tempting to simply increase the voltage applied on the catalyst to increase the reaction rate, that can have the unintended consequence of splitting water, not reducing CO2, Wang said.

“If you deplete the CO2 that’s close to the electrode, other molecules have to diffuse to the electrode, and that takes time,” Wang said. “But if you’re increasing the voltage, it’s more likely that the surrounding water will take that opportunity to react and split into hydrogen and oxygen.”

The solution proved to be relatively simple — to avoid splitting water, the team took the catalyst out of solution.

“We replaced that liquid water with water vapor, and feed in high-concentration CO2 gas,” he said. “So if the old system was more than 99 percent water and less than 1 percent CO2, now we can completely reverse that, and pump 97 percent CO2 gas and only 3 percent water vapor into this system. Before those liquid water also functions as ion conductors in the system, and now we use ion exchange membranes instead to help ions move around without liquid water.

“The impact is that we can deliver an order of magnitude higher current density,” he continued. “Previously, we were operating at about ten milliamps-per-centimeter squared, but today we can easily ramp up to 100 milliamps.”

Going forward, Wang said, the system still has challenges to overcome — particularly related to stability.

“If you want to use this to make an economic or environmental impact, it needs to have a continuous operations of thousands of hours,” he said. “Right now, we can do this for tens of hours, so there’s still a big gap, but I believe those problems can be addressed with more detailed analysis of both the CO2 reduction catalyst and the water oxidation catalyst.”

Ultimately, Wang said, the day may come when industry will be able to capture the CO2 that is now released into the atmosphere and transform it into useful products.

“Carbon monoxide is not a particularly high value chemical product,” Wang said. “To explore more possibilities, my group has also developed several copper-based catalysts that can further reduce CO2 into products that are much more valuable.”

Wang credited the freedom he enjoyed at the Rowland Institute for helping lead to breakthroughs like the new system.

“Rowland has provided me, as an early career researcher, a great platform for independent research, which initiates a large portion of the research directions my group will continue to push forward,” said Wang, who recently accepted a position at Rice University. “I will definitely miss my days here.”

Courtesy : Science Daily

Engineering Review on Youtube now! Watch DICE Energy & Water 2018

on 02/11/2018

Watch DICE Energy & Water 2018, Although Engineering Review’s journey continues for over 43 years now and it is striving to bring reports and analysis on engineering and associated sectors, it is now responding to modern trends in media like connecting to social media.

DICE Energy and Water 2018 held in NED University was covered in our print edition and also the event has been put on our Youtube account to cater to the modern requirements of today. Now, our readers can have a look at various engineering events comprehensively covered on our Youtube Channel.

 

Videos!

 

 

Syed Rizwan Ali finds fresh engineers sailing smoothly with CPEC!

on 02/11/2018

Syed Rizwan Ali, the Manager, Business Incubation Center (BIC) of Bahria University, Karachi is satisfied with the quality of engineering education for sailing smoothly with China Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC).

More importantly, he and his team are striving to introduce some product or a service for the corridor initiative which may bring distinction to engineers in Pakistan.

Talking to Engineering Review, Mr Ali who has done MS in CAAD from the United Kingdom shared details how Bahria University and his centre are playing part in engineering education in Pakistan. “Besides offering degree courses in Engineering Science, Bahria had recently launched doctorate programs in marine sciences and humanities and social sciences”.

Syed Rizwan revealed his incubation centre had the prestige to win the first two positions in Microsoft Competition 2018 in which around 120 universities of Pakistan took part. BIC’s five projects reached the final stages, he said. They were endorsed by the organizers. The project which secured top position was related to creating a conducive atmosphere for asthma patients.

Bahria is among those universities which have begun Chinese Language courses and here a six monthly course is being ratified by Confucius Center, Karachi University. He said if any Pakistani achieved a command over the Chinese language, he can get a job of interpreter too.

Affiliated with software engineering along with his professional experience, Rizwan is agreed with the fact that over 95 per cent of Pakistani software companies is doing foreign projects. Why are they unable to cater to the local market? They lacked creativity and fail to find solutions to local problems. Local companies get the projects of the US and find cheap labour for earning US dollars. Until and unless we go for finding solutions of local problems, our industry would not grow, he said.

Rizwan is not satisfied with software export at all. He believes we in Pakistan are always late and talk too much rather than working. In 2001, there was wind for call centers. We were late and the projects moved to the south. We remained busy organizing seminars only. Same happened when there was a move for big data. Now again we are merely talking about entrepreneurship.

“We have a potential for exporting software but branding and credibility are two essentials which are absent here.” He said. For instance, Microsoft and Oracle are brands which people buying with confidence which is missing here. Also, he added transfer of payments is a big issue.

On academia and industry linkage, Syed Rizwan has many success stories. Bahria University had taken an initiative in 2001 under which the Corporate Advisory Committee (CAC) was formed. They were supposed to invite industry and create an atmosphere for industry-faculty discussion for resolution of the issues of the industry. Now CACs are upgraded as SCACs—Strategic Corporate Advisory Committees.

How does Industry respond to academia? It’s good, he responds. We organize an interaction every 6 months. Most recently, the university invited industry’s input in designing maritime courses at an international conference. He, however, experiences issues in process of interaction between academia and the industry. “Industry does not share its problems because it does not trust academia. They think they are just teachers. Partly, the industry does have a point and the teachers lack professional experience. They go directly to teaching profession after finishing their education. They do not get professional exposure unlike other countries where professional experience is a must for teaching in any institution.

Syed Rizwan sees Pakistan Engineering Council (PEC) and Higher Education Commission (HEC) on the same page for improving the quality of education in Pakistan. “PEC is doing good in terms of accreditation and teaching that helped as regards Washington Accord”, he concludes. – By Muhammad Salahuddin.

Video!

Bringing Science in Thar!

on 02/11/2018

Dawood Foundation Magnifi Science in collaboration with Thar Foundation ignites spark for science in children of Thar. Thousands of children from across Thar gathered with excitement to play, learn, imagine, explore and discover the wonders of science at The Dawood Foundation Magnifi Science Thar Exhibition on October 26-27.

TDF Magnifi Science Thar Exhibition was organized in collaboration with the Thar Foundation; Sindh Engro Coal Mining Company (SECMC); Engro Corporation and Engro Powergen Thar (Pvt.) Limited.

TDF Magnifi Science Exhibition is a collaborated effort of some of Pakistan’s leading corporations and public sector organisations along with academia, entrepreneurs and specialists in various science fields to promote the culture of science, technology and critical thinking in the country.

The exhibition was held in Karachi in 2016 and 2017 and was the biggest science exhibition in the country in terms of attendance, reach and impact.

The Science Exhibition aims to make quality education accessible for all and encourage the quest for Science in a remote area like Thar where literacy rate is quite low.

The idea of bringing TDF Magnifi Science to Thar stemmed from Thar Foundation’s philosophy to create avenues for children and students of Thar to interact with functional school experience.

TDF Magnifi Science Thar Exhibition was a two-day event which was free of charge for public to experience science through various interactive activities and exhibits made by professionals.

Enthusiastic children explored interesting themes such as Optical Illusions, Forces and Motion, Sound, Mind Games and Health. Each theme had exhibits designed by professionals to explain the basic principles of science and their practical demonstration.

In Optical Illusion theme, children were amazed when they saw the ‘Talking Head Illusion’ where one sees the head without the body and Infinity Box which creates endless duplicates of your faces. Exhibits in Health theme gave children an enriching learning experience about human body including showing how veins and arteries work and how different human body functions.

Young scientists formed groups to make structures with dowels and rubber bands in Forces and Motion theme while some engineered pathways with PVC pipes. Observing forces like magnetic fields and sound waves through demonstration thrilled children in the theme.

Commenting on the success of the first TDF Magnifi Science exhibition, Sabeen Shah – Manager Education for Thar Foundation said: “Thar Foundation aims to provide access to quality education to all students and children of Islamkot as part of its adoption of the Sustainable Development Goals accelerated model. Although Thar ranks low on Human Development Index, we believe that it has great potential and talent in terms of its students. The TDF Magnifi Science Thar will help hone the interest of these children towards science and learning and will eventually prove to be a game changer in the region.”

A large number of attendees belonging from all walks of life including politicians, educationists, specialists, entrepreneurs, science clubs, environmentalists and many others attended the exhibition. It was also open for the public and private schools in Thar, coalescing on a single platform to talk and exploring the wonders of science.

Sharing her views on hosting the exhibition in Thar, General Manager of The Dawood Foundation Syed Fasihuddin Biyabani said “TDF Magnifi Science is nationally recognized as an innovative method of promoting science literacy in society through informal learning. It is encouraging to see that students and teachers of Thar showing enthusiasm to learn science. We believe that it is important to give the students of Thar a chance to experience science like their counterparts in the metropolis.”

Sharing his experience with the TDF Magnifi Science Thar Exhibition, Mohammad Khan from TDF said “While aggregating the Magnifi Science to Thar this time we went ahead and learnt the different scientific reasoning in the ingenious lifestyle of Thar, such as its architecture, earthenware, water reservoirs. It was fascinating for us to learn and analogize it to modern techniques. I think MagnifiScience has become a two-way process for us, with self-learning as well as a public education.”