Four Weird Ways to Make Electricity

  Рет қаралды 124,930

SciShow

SciShow

Ай бұрын

Visit brilliant.org/scishow/ to get started learning STEM for free. The first 200 people will get 20% off their annual premium subscription and a 30-day free trial.
When you think of newer ways to make electricity, solar cells and wind turbines may come to mind. But scientists can make the stuff from just about anything. And they're working on some truly bizarre ways to generate power.
Hosted by: Niba @NotesbyNiba (she/her)
----------
Support SciShow by becoming a patron on Patreon: / scishow
----------
Huge thanks go to the following Patreon supporters for helping us keep SciShow free for everyone forever: Adam Brainard, Alex Hackman, Ash, Benjamin Carleski, Bryan Cloer, charles george, Chris Mackey, Chris Peters, Christoph Schwanke, Christopher R Boucher, DrakoEsper, Eric Jensen, Friso, Garrett Galloway, Harrison Mills, J. Copen, Jaap Westera, Jason A Saslow, Jeffrey Mckishen, Jeremy Mattern, Kenny Wilson, Kevin Bealer, Kevin Knupp, Lyndsay Brown, Matt Curls, Michelle Dove, Piya Shedden, Rizwan Kassim, Sam Lutfi
----------
Looking for SciShow elsewhere on the internet?
SciShow Tangents Podcast: scishow-tangents.simplecast.com/
TikTok: / scishow
Twitter: / scishow
Instagram: / thescishow
Facebook: / scishow
#SciShow #science #education #learning #complexly
----------
Sources:
electronics.howstuffworks.com...
onscale.com/piezoelectricity/...
www.unsw.edu.au/science/our-s...
www.britannica.com/science/mi...
www2.tulane.edu/~sanelson/een...
www.britannica.com/science/el...
www.nature.com/articles/s4146...
www.britannica.com/science/so...
www.eurekalert.org/news-relea...
theconversation.com/life-on-m...
mars.nasa.gov/mars2020/spacec...
mars.nasa.gov/msl/spacecraft/...
rps.nasa.gov/power-and-therma...
geothermal-energy-journal.spr...
rps.nasa.gov/about-rps/about-...
www.britannica.com/science/Se...
www.eurekalert.org/news-relea...
osrp.lanl.gov/pacemakers.shtml
www.space.com/china-stirling-...
rps.nasa.gov/thermoelectric/
www.cbc.ca/news/science/ann-m...
www.nbcnews.com/technology/te...
www.britannica.com/science/ph...
www.cam.ac.uk/stories/hacking...
www.biorxiv.org/content/biorx...
worldbiomarketinsights.com/re...
pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/acsa...
www.nature.com/articles/s4158...
www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/arti...
www.nature.com/articles/s4158...
www.energy.gov/eere/fuelcells...
phys.org/news/2023-03-newly-e...
theconversation.com/electrici...
www.eurekalert.org/news-relea...
onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/e...
Images:
www.gettyimages.com/
commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Fi...
commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Fi...
javalab.org/en/tuning_fork_an...
mars.nasa.gov/resources/3811/...
mars.nasa.gov/resources/24732...
rps.nasa.gov/power-and-therma...
commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Fi...
rps.nasa.gov/resources/168/ho...
www.jpl.nasa.gov/images/pia25...
rps.nasa.gov/resources/168/ho...
www.eurekalert.org/multimedia...
commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Fi...
oceancolor.gsfc.nasa.gov/gall...
commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Fi...
commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Fi...
www.eurekalert.org/multimedia...
www.nature.com/articles/s4146...

Пікірлер: 276
@SciShow
@SciShow Ай бұрын
Visit brilliant.org/scishow/ to get started learning STEM for free. The first 200 people will get 20% off their annual premium subscription and a 30-day free trial.
@whitestarlinegoodnight
@whitestarlinegoodnight Ай бұрын
"Even bones can be piezoelectric" _So that's why my joints crack like a glowstick_
@marcopohl4875
@marcopohl4875 Ай бұрын
I am Thor, the god of THUNDER!
@justingoodman9352
@justingoodman9352 Ай бұрын
I TOTALLY feel you on that!. I'm like a box of Rice Krispies... When I get up and move (especially in the morning) my body and joints immediately start to snap crackle and pop! 😂
@lindaseel9986
@lindaseel9986 Ай бұрын
​​@@justingoodman9352Mine too. So much so, I had to have a knee replacement.
@justingoodman9352
@justingoodman9352 Ай бұрын
@@lindaseel9986 yeah I'm 36 and I went to the ER about a year or two ago because my left hip was just KILLING me and they did an X-ray and said I had arthritis set up in my hip but I'm pretty sure there are other things wrong too because I can hear it and feel it pop back and forth if I'm bending over to do something. I'm pretty sure it's a combination of where I tore my MCL in my left knee in high school and tried to come back and play sports before I fully recovered so my hip was probably over compensating for my knee and the biggest contributor is probably when I feel off the roof of a 2 story cabin and landed on my left side. I bruised or cracked some ribs because it hurt to even breathe for like 2 weeks and I had a huge limp for about a week. I gotta get some insurance and get it checked out. I would honestly love to be able to go ahead and get a hip replacement but I feel like it would just cost so much money.
@lindaseel9986
@lindaseel9986 Ай бұрын
@@justingoodman9352 Wow! You have had a lot happen. Now, I am 66. I got my mom's genes for degenerative arthritis. That popping and clicking is arthritis and probably torn or loose tendons. I have that in my shoulder as well. I don't know if your income could qualify you for Medicaid. That would pay for doctors and surgery. I wish you all the best.
@waitselljones8068
@waitselljones8068 Ай бұрын
I don't think I've seen this woman, Niba, in other videos but I actually quite liked her in this one. The way she speaks is right to the point, paced well, sounds smooth, and without any excess dramaticism. I wouldn't mind her in more videos.
@BigTimeRushFan2112
@BigTimeRushFan2112 Ай бұрын
she's very easy to look at also...
@tauceti8060
@tauceti8060 Ай бұрын
I have a crush on her
@danmigneault6103
@danmigneault6103 Ай бұрын
She is special ! She really speak clearly and with the right words at the right place! Impressive and admirable!
@alanhelton
@alanhelton Ай бұрын
She could narrate my dreams! That would be sweet!
@michaelblacktree
@michaelblacktree Ай бұрын
I agree, she has a great speaking voice.
@davidioanhedges
@davidioanhedges Ай бұрын
Clarification : piezoelectricity works on *changes* in pressure, not simply pressure, which is why sound is a good source
@smart_ledtv
@smart_ledtv Ай бұрын
It all is depicted in animations and clarified by Niba in later part of the video.
@PotionsMaster666
@PotionsMaster666 Ай бұрын
Wait what ? Changes in pressure ?
@smart_ledtv
@smart_ledtv Ай бұрын
@@PotionsMaster666 Yes, it's all about internal vibrations (changes in pressure a.k.a. squeezing and stretching).
@davidioanhedges
@davidioanhedges Ай бұрын
@@PotionsMaster666 Just pressure on its own has no effect on these, they make electricity when there is a change of pressure, so a sound pressure wave will make electricity
@PotionsMaster666
@PotionsMaster666 Ай бұрын
@@davidioanhedges 😮 But why *change* in pressure tho ? The way the video explained it was reasonable that only pressure was required. I will Google it. Thnx for replies guys
@SAMURIADI
@SAMURIADI Ай бұрын
that thumbnail is giving ElectroBOOM a aneurysm "THERE IS NO WAY TO GENERATE POWER OUT OF NOTHING"
@johnnychang4233
@johnnychang4233 Ай бұрын
In the case of the cloud generated electricity is practically a controlled lightning rod.
@ajogar
@ajogar Ай бұрын
well it's not nothing it's thin air (only thin air tho, thick air won't work)
@justlisten82
@justlisten82 Ай бұрын
"Nothing" is just a concept in the end anyways🫠
@mandrakejake
@mandrakejake Ай бұрын
The big bang disagrees 😂
@cujo.
@cujo. Ай бұрын
*an aneurysm
@colinfew6570
@colinfew6570 Ай бұрын
What a fantastic host.
@btfilther
@btfilther Ай бұрын
She somehow manages to be both soothing and engaging. Nice video.
@Unmannedair
@Unmannedair Ай бұрын
And wrong... 😬 At the minimum incomplete if we're being generous.
@smart_ledtv
@smart_ledtv Ай бұрын
It's a nice example of her *infectious enthusiasm and passion,* but she's not perfect either... with her proprioception of index fingers. @2:42 Just watch it in slow motion - I love it! 😉
@lachlanchester8142
@lachlanchester8142 28 күн бұрын
@@Unmannedairhow so
@Macachee
@Macachee 25 күн бұрын
@@UnmannedairNo she’s not.
@stax6092
@stax6092 Ай бұрын
Dang, and here I was hoping for one of them to be "Potato". :(
@EV01D
@EV01D Ай бұрын
I love the new sets so much. The green screen stuff was great, but this feels easier to digest
@TimeSurfer206
@TimeSurfer206 Ай бұрын
Niba, I need to point out that, at about 5:55, the 12V car battery you compared the leaf to is comparing 6 cells in series, with the single cell that the leaf is. So, the leaf cell is closer to 1/10th the voltage of the car battery, than the miniscule amount your comparison suggests. Also, the voltage of the leaf cell might be easily raised with different materials on the cathode and anode.
@DrakiniteOfficial
@DrakiniteOfficial Ай бұрын
This also misses the CRITICAL piece of info that voltage does not necessarily mean power. Car batteries have a relatively low voltage (compared to other electrical systems) but can provide an insane amount of current and therefore power. Meanwhile, you can create static electricity with hundreds (or thousands?) of volts, but with a minuscule amount of energy stored within. Somehow I doubt that 10 plant leaves would be able to generate more than a couple milliamps at best. I'd be happy to be proven wrong though, it would be very cool.
@siliconplay5
@siliconplay5 Ай бұрын
That is just a battery with a plant electrolite, and in that case we already have the classic lemon or potato battery...
@ori_05
@ori_05 Ай бұрын
How much current can these leaves push
@h3lladvocate
@h3lladvocate Ай бұрын
Watts should prob be the comparison used
@Baked42L0ng
@Baked42L0ng Ай бұрын
@@DrakiniteOfficialnow if we could genetically engineer the plants to develop the structures themselves and us just “farm” electricity thatd be cool, but that is probably more in the realm of science fiction currently
@mattdangerg
@mattdangerg Ай бұрын
Dang new host is a wonderful speaker
@Alice_Walker
@Alice_Walker Ай бұрын
It's so comforting to me amongst all the climate change disasters to see content about the ingenuity of science exploring alternative ways to power things 🙌🏻
@averywhitaker3513
@averywhitaker3513 Ай бұрын
Mycobacterium _WHAT_ ?!
@MikeWMiller
@MikeWMiller Ай бұрын
came for this. wait, not literally...
@greensteve9307
@greensteve9307 Ай бұрын
Exactly what it sounds like. First identified in genital secretions. "It was first reported in November 1884 by Lustgarten, who found a bacillus with the staining appearance of tubercle bacilli in syphilitic chancres. Subsequent to this, Alvarez and Tavel found organisms similar to that described by Lustgarten also in normal genital secretions (smegma). "
@MorgenPeschke
@MorgenPeschke Ай бұрын
I can think of a bunch of situations where the environment is colder than a human body, and running out of light is a Very Bad Thing. If that headlamp fueled by body heat is reliable, it could literally be a lifesaver
@HotelPapa100
@HotelPapa100 Ай бұрын
That electron flow animation illustrating the thermoelectiv effect can't be right. That would lead to high voltage and charge between the warm an cold end of the circuit in no time. In this, like in any other electric circuit, electrons flow along a circular path. The two metals present in the thermoelectric jucnction create a voltage difference that changes with temperature, which creates the electric "pressure" that forces electrons around.
@Unmannedair
@Unmannedair Ай бұрын
Yeah she botched a lot of stuff in this... LoL Heat flows down the wires like that though. But there's a differential electrical pressure at the wire junctions and that's what causes the current to flow. Heat is transmitted from electron to electron in a wave much faster than the actual electron velocity and the wave velocity is independent from the charge velocity. I think that's the distinction you were looking for. So the heat flows like her diagram but not the charge
@kristyanne719
@kristyanne719 Ай бұрын
My thoughts exactly. When I saw that I was like WTF!
@iBeast_M0de
@iBeast_M0de Ай бұрын
A fun fact about Piezo electricity, it can be used to create motion with electricity, like in a quartz powered clock or watch. There are (diesel) injectors that are actuated not by solenoids or other electrical means but by Piezo electricity, which has multiple advantages; the main one being the fast acting nature compared to something comparatively high mass as an solenoid and also the longevity is a large factor. I own a car with an engine that has that (an VW 1.9 TDI, an inline 4 turbo charged diesel, engine code ASZ) and it has racked up 540k km or around 335k miles with the original Bosch injectors from the factory. Let's be generous here, with the fact that it has mostly done highway miles at around 70 mph. It does about 2000 revolutions a second. Since it's a four stroke it means every other revolution a combustion event occures. That equates to about 290.000.000(!) ( 335.000 miles / 70 mph * 60 minutes * 1000 injections per minute ) injection cycles on each of all four injectors. Mind you that in semi-modern diesels it's not unheard of for an injector to file up to 7 times every combustion event. It's not hard to imagine the actual number might be closer to a billion actuations, especially if you consider the average speed is actually lower which means more firing events per mile.. It boggles my mind when I think about this.
@ZedaZ80
@ZedaZ80 Ай бұрын
That really is a fun fact :0
@SuperStrikeagle
@SuperStrikeagle Ай бұрын
Its been a while since i last watched scishow, WHATS THAT SET! THATS AMAZING! Great production guys!
@andreyrumming6842
@andreyrumming6842 Ай бұрын
Weird ways we make electricity: 1. Sound (Piezo electrics) 2. Heat (Radioisotope Thermoelectric Generators or RTGs) 3. Light (Solar panels / Photosynthesis) 4. Air (Enzyme Hydrogenase turning hydrogen into electricity directly / Clouds and humidity)
@michaelzatarga5157
@michaelzatarga5157 27 күн бұрын
Well done Niba...I truly appreciate your approach and straightforwardness. Great job
@robertparkinson2102
@robertparkinson2102 Ай бұрын
Piezoelectric is used in atomic force microscopes and scanning tunnelling electron microscopes. The samples are moved relative to a sharp probe. The ultra fine movement is controlled by varying the voltage applied to the crystals. These sort of microscopes were used in 1989 to write IBM out of 35 atoms.
@outlawbillionairez9780
@outlawbillionairez9780 Ай бұрын
I make electricity shuffling across carpet in slippers. Then getting hit with 40,000 volts when I touch refrigerator. ⚡
@Unmannedair
@Unmannedair Ай бұрын
We're walking around on a 4000 volt potential just being outside... This b******* article completely lacks any sort of depth or context. She pulled this article out of the same thin air that she pulled the science out of
@seaside3218
@seaside3218 Ай бұрын
Great video and fantastic ideas! These wonderful solutions have been around for years and I applaud the great minds that strive to get them put into action. Just one thing, selling electricity is a business. Until each country regulates this and recognizes that electricity is a basic human need to power society, nothing will change. EVER. Greed is the problem, not the incredible minds of science.
@ericmorris312
@ericmorris312 Ай бұрын
I read a research paper about the “Photo flexoelectric effect” recently. I think it’s worth a look if you liked this video.
@B_Ahmed1234
@B_Ahmed1234 Ай бұрын
That last one, would be great in Florida.
@percival413
@percival413 25 күн бұрын
really loving the new set
@DoctorX17
@DoctorX17 Ай бұрын
Missing piece of info for the “leaf battery” thing - what sort of current (amps) does it generate? Putting them in series could get you to 12v, but it definitely won’t generate as much power as the car battery
@jonaswox
@jonaswox Ай бұрын
pretty relevant info :D
@Unmannedair
@Unmannedair Ай бұрын
Yeah, that leaf battery thing, we're talking microamps here. You wouldn't even be able to measure using standard electrical equipment. Definitely not with your run-of-the-mill multimeter. Lol
@DoctorX17
@DoctorX17 Ай бұрын
Yeah, decent oopsie to make XD I’m sure some people are thinking they could charge their phone with a line of plants, lol
@Unmannedair
@Unmannedair Ай бұрын
​​​​@@DoctorX17 I mean, technically you could, if you could wait for about 5.6 million seconds... That's about 128 days for a 10% charge. 😅
@DoctorX17
@DoctorX17 Ай бұрын
@@Unmannedair it just put more plants in parallel XD
@garyt.8745
@garyt.8745 28 күн бұрын
Love Niba! What a great presenter 👍
@h7opolo
@h7opolo Ай бұрын
this is my favorite topic.
@Unmannedair
@Unmannedair Ай бұрын
It's my favorite topic too and she butchered it. 😅
@RotX1
@RotX1 Ай бұрын
The humidity one, if fully matured, would deadass be such a GODSEND in the majority of south east asian countries
@clickrick
@clickrick Ай бұрын
It's definitely exciting stuff, but I love those little asides - makes the presentation really cute!
@pauls5745
@pauls5745 Ай бұрын
I haven't found much on growing plants to be the electrolyte, or literally a battery for some really green power. Bio electricity is exciting! What about how eels can make power?
@thekaxmax
@thekaxmax Ай бұрын
That chemistry isn't that efficient.
@MasterBlaster3545
@MasterBlaster3545 Ай бұрын
I never thought we would be getting electrons from smegma
@Macachee
@Macachee 25 күн бұрын
Huh?
@dmondot
@dmondot Ай бұрын
@5:57: "but multiple leaves can be strung together to create a circuit"... Yeah, technically that would be possible if the leaves are either detached or belong to different plants that are electrically isolated. But in practice, you can't string together multiple leaves from plants all connected by the same soil. At most you will get half a volt, and that's too little to be usable for any electronic today. You need at a minimum a diode drop (0.7V), or in practice 1.5V to start to make any higher voltage.
@catatonicbug7522
@catatonicbug7522 Ай бұрын
This is great! Now the Cloud can power itself!
@marsovac
@marsovac Ай бұрын
Hydrogen is extremely reactive and does not like to float by itself in the air. Most of it is bonded in water vapor. So the technique to oxidize it to extract energy is a bit overly optimistic. This is already happening by itself in the air without us being able to extract energy from it, and we would be trying to oxide the remaining scraps. BTW oxidizing is the same as burning.
@white_isnt_a_race2338
@white_isnt_a_race2338 Ай бұрын
We already have hydrogen fuel cell cars that do exactly that
@dagnation9397
@dagnation9397 Ай бұрын
If you put a little oil in the pan and stir the hydrogen around a lot with a spatula when you oxidize it, it will just blacken a little around the edges and stay yummy on the inside.
@jodyknight
@jodyknight Ай бұрын
I really like this presenter and it was a very interesting video, thanks.
@The-One-and-Only100
@The-One-and-Only100 Ай бұрын
Can't wait to get an RTG powered car
@corlisscrabtree3647
@corlisscrabtree3647 Ай бұрын
Thank you 🙏
@PaulADAigle
@PaulADAigle Ай бұрын
I'm aware of a 'thin sheet' to collect water for consumption, now I'm wondering if that 'thin sheet' can gather electricity as well as water. Looks like I'll be surfing the net.
@wiggletonthewise2141
@wiggletonthewise2141 Ай бұрын
Sci show list show, sci show list show!!
@archionblu
@archionblu Ай бұрын
I'd love a more in-depth video about the final method (the synthetic clouds)!
@mrtienphysics666
@mrtienphysics666 Ай бұрын
this is how ultrasound works. this episode is great!
@dreadlordken3824
@dreadlordken3824 Ай бұрын
No mention of 1950s sound powered phones?
@SCUBONZIES
@SCUBONZIES 23 күн бұрын
NICE SET , Midnight Marauders Tour Guide😃
@chronus4421
@chronus4421 Ай бұрын
Should have mentioned the push-button BBQ grill sparker as an example.
@teardowndan5364
@teardowndan5364 Ай бұрын
Since photosynthesis needs the electrons it generates from sunlight to split carbon from CO2 and make sugar from it, extracting energy from the process almost certainly disrupts it. The "cloud" generator sounds like by the time you get something bigger than micro-power from it, you may as well put a small wind turbine in: the cloud still needs wind or convection to passively move moist air through.
@thekaxmax
@thekaxmax Ай бұрын
Natural photosynthesis is really inefficient, so using energy the photosynthesis isn't is a good source.
@teardowndan5364
@teardowndan5364 Ай бұрын
@@thekaxmax Even an inefficient process can still work out if it scales in a cost-effective manner. Can't really imagine organic PV being cheaper per mW nor more convenient though.
@antivanti
@antivanti Ай бұрын
I don't think the main issue with those leaves is the low voltage but the very low amperage they can generate. Even if you string a bunch of them together to get 14 volts you wouldn't be able to drive the starter motor for a car engine or even generate sparks in the sparkplugs. So the comparison with a car battery (which can melt a wrench btw) is very oversimplified
@riccardo9953
@riccardo9953 Ай бұрын
when water molecules in the air "rub" against the walls of the pores they should loose kinetic energy that then becomes the electricity. this would thus cool down the water molecules. would this not cause condensation to for form in the pores which would then become trapped because of the capillary effect until it evaporates?
@alamrasyidi4097
@alamrasyidi4097 Ай бұрын
i kinda wonder if we'll one day harness electricity from ATP
@OverwoundGames
@OverwoundGames Ай бұрын
now look at Garret Moddel's Casimir force generator...
@bensmith7536
@bensmith7536 Ай бұрын
Science puns hit different.
@ni-9945
@ni-9945 Ай бұрын
I've been watching this channel regularly for five years and just realized I wasn't subscribed.
@Zack16611
@Zack16611 Ай бұрын
“A single car battery” phrased as if it’s not a 25+lbs power source 😂
@vyvianalcott1681
@vyvianalcott1681 Ай бұрын
Lead acid batteries have a relatively low energy density, modern batteries have 5x or more the available power. Using car batteries is just a commonly known reference point, like how some people use bananas for photograph scale. Good comprehension though, you did understand the word battery! Way to go, buddy!
@realvanman1
@realvanman1 17 күн бұрын
0.28 volt from the leaf, but how much current??
@Shaden0040
@Shaden0040 Ай бұрын
materials that compress can create electricity makes sense now what if we could figure out a way to harness gravity waves The compression say something say like quartz crystals or quartz rods that are like a mile long I wonder if that could generate electricity? Anybody done any research on that?
@EinsteinsHair
@EinsteinsHair Ай бұрын
As I recall, one of the things that took so many years before they got LIGO to work was that they had to detect a compression that was less than the size of a proton. I don't think it would move the atoms of a crystal enough.
@saivinaypavanan7334
@saivinaypavanan7334 Ай бұрын
Weird!
@thurlravenscroft2572
@thurlravenscroft2572 Ай бұрын
Saying .28 volts doesn’t tell us much. How many watts are created?
@yakustone6356
@yakustone6356 26 күн бұрын
Saying watts doesn't tell us much. How many joules are created?
@thurlravenscroft2572
@thurlravenscroft2572 26 күн бұрын
@@yakustone6356 watts tells me a whole lot more about what this setup can produce at any given time. Joules tells me what the setup can produce over an extended period of time, which to me isn’t as useful.
@yakustone6356
@yakustone6356 26 күн бұрын
@@thurlravenscroft2572 Not really though. For generating energy and energy measurement is more useful. Think of a capacitor vs a battery.
@srwapo
@srwapo 26 күн бұрын
Has anyone tried destroying all the planets in the solar system to build a sphere of solar panels around the sun?
@Macachee
@Macachee 25 күн бұрын
I have!
@CorbiniteVids
@CorbiniteVids 29 күн бұрын
What was that soil bacteria again? Hm?
@roninbadger7750
@roninbadger7750 Ай бұрын
Oxidizing hydrogen's? Isn't this how our cells break down Carbs? Cleaving the carbon and Hydrogen, making Co2 and H2O with the oxygen we breath. This sometimes creates free radicals that need a donor Electron from Anti Oxidants.
@raphaelgarcia9576
@raphaelgarcia9576 Ай бұрын
How about piezoelectric generators along freeways, or really loud places like schools😅
@chrisbelkosky5466
@chrisbelkosky5466 Ай бұрын
That has been done in a few case studies
@cicad2007
@cicad2007 Ай бұрын
It seems a slight contradiction has creeped into your dissertation. At 4:00 you state that the internal temp should be hotter than the external to generate electricity. Then, at 4:33 you further state about wandering a dark forest at night. At night, the forest would be colder than the daytime, while the internal temp would still be hot, so why would you need additional batteries? Of course, you could be referring to the extreme cold of space or Mars, but that did not come across. Also, the student that created light from her own body heat would still work in a dark forest, perhaps even better.
@bopcity5785
@bopcity5785 Ай бұрын
its not necessary that internal is hotter than external, only that there is a significant difference. This doesnt occur much on Earth(atleast compared to space) hence the dark forest example where body and forest temp are similar (even if the forest is a bit colder)
@aliengeo
@aliengeo Ай бұрын
Where I live, the air in the middle of the night is often only 10° C cooler than a person walking through it. I don't think that's a large enough differential for the tech to work from the way it was phrased.
@hobojesus6288
@hobojesus6288 Ай бұрын
wouldnt harvesting the energy in a plants leaves prevent them from pulling carbon out of the air as effectively. i was under the impression all that energy is used to turn carbon dioxide into sugar?
@fishyerik
@fishyerik Ай бұрын
Well, you can't extract energy from a single state, like static pressure won't work for piezoelectric power generation, or air just being humid won't provide any energy for you. You need a difference, a change, something that "happens". The weaker and more dilute this difference is, the less likely it is it to be meaningful to try to extract energy from it. None of the principles have reasonable potential to make a difference on grid scale, the Seebeck effect is useful for power generation in very specific cases, the rest is nowhere near that. The piezoelectric effect is used for sensing, and can technically be used to generate some power, but it's not practical. We have great technologies for converting sunlight into usable energy. "Up to" value of open circuit voltage is in itself meaningless, harvesting meaningful electric power directly from photosynthesis is not possible, as far as we know. Meaningful in this context requires, among other things, being a relevant alternative to photovoltaic power generation. Don't get me wrong, I enjoyed the episode, despite some of the technical "details" were wrong, and suggested potential usefulness that isn't real.
@AdityaMehendale
@AdityaMehendale Ай бұрын
1:38 --> animation is likely incorrect; the hexagon "stretches" - no reason for the ions to get displaced relatively, due to pressure.
@bowez9
@bowez9 Ай бұрын
Charge difference is the only way.
@domenicperito4635
@domenicperito4635 Ай бұрын
oxidation is burning. they are the same.
@VictarisGX
@VictarisGX Ай бұрын
So, according to this video, Florida is set to become the US' newest power station!
@thefurbyman
@thefurbyman 27 күн бұрын
This is so disrespectful for Nichola Tesla 😓
@rsmorex
@rsmorex Ай бұрын
Little worried about how giddy she got over crushing bones 😳
@Zaihanisme
@Zaihanisme Ай бұрын
BONE BROTH POWDER
@rsmorex
@rsmorex Ай бұрын
@@Zaihanisme it’s called stock. If you use bones it’s a stock not a broth.
@vyvianalcott1681
@vyvianalcott1681 Ай бұрын
I hate commenting on people's appearance but that blouse is fantastic
@RSKofficial-267A
@RSKofficial-267A Ай бұрын
Could we use any of these to power our needs?
@vylbird8014
@vylbird8014 Ай бұрын
Not really. They aren't practical for grid scale power. But there are niche applications for things like powering sensors or keeping batteries charged. Think of heat-powered sticker-sensor you could slap on a pipe, for example, to monitor the temperature and send a radio message a couple of times an hour - no wiring required. Or a motion-powered strip across a road that counts cars and sends the readings back to traffic control. Or a remote control that is powered by the motion of pressing the buttons so it never needs new batteries.
@marcopohl4875
@marcopohl4875 Ай бұрын
On a small scale: Definitly, some of them are in use already. on a large scale: Not yet, but I hope soon.
@bensoncheung2801
@bensoncheung2801 Ай бұрын
⚡️⚡️⚡️
@angelitabecerra
@angelitabecerra Ай бұрын
Running things on plants isn't that weird. We all made potato batteries growing up in science class, right?
@augstradus
@augstradus 26 күн бұрын
That's one of the things that always baffles me as a European. I always thought that was a Hollywood thing, we just don't do that here. And then the narrative that the average US Citizen is dumb af. It just doesn't add up.
@CompletelyNormal
@CompletelyNormal Ай бұрын
I suppose it's no surprise that the person who made the flashlight powered by the difference in temperature between her body and the surroundings was in Canada.
@KennethKolano
@KennethKolano Ай бұрын
Really wish we got some deeper analysis here. Squeezing a bunch of tech in does make for a clickworthy video, but without diving in a bit deeper it's hard to evaluate these techs. For instance I;d presume the humidity one is likely very dependent on variations in such to work out, and would only get 1 to 2 cycles per day depending on if it worked in reverse. I'd also presume that the sorts of structures that make it work well in one direction or the other, likely make it hard to reverse (i.e. drying out a wet thing, or wetting a dry one).
@greensteve9307
@greensteve9307 Ай бұрын
All the sources are listed in the description for further reading :)
@Infernoraptor
@Infernoraptor Ай бұрын
Wait a second, "mycobacterium smegmatum"? As in "smegma"? Really?
@daviefebus6123
@daviefebus6123 Ай бұрын
that smells gotta come from somewhere
@greensteve9307
@greensteve9307 Ай бұрын
Yep, because that's where the bacterium was first discovered, which is a common way to name bacteria. :) en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mycobacterium_smegmatis
@Infernoraptor
@Infernoraptor Ай бұрын
@greensteve9307 I figured as much, but, come on, you KNOW the scientists were snickering when they came up with that name. (And I am not blaming them in the slightest XD )
@marvinochieng6295
@marvinochieng6295 Ай бұрын
alright then, this presenter is gorgeous and has a good voice. love the good work. keep it up
@josephdonais4778
@josephdonais4778 Ай бұрын
P238?, WB's Marvin the Martian would have a field day with it.
@jackielinde7568
@jackielinde7568 Ай бұрын
The RTG power units aren't anything new. NASA used them on both Pioneer space probes because they were going someplace where sunlight was not a viable option.
@thekaxmax
@thekaxmax Ай бұрын
Not new, that's not the point. Is not well known, that's the point.
@RedScaledKnight1
@RedScaledKnight1 Ай бұрын
We miss you, John and Hank. Thank you so much for your legacy
@0Buddhaspot0
@0Buddhaspot0 Ай бұрын
The same way we have a sound powered telephone... I could think of that
@CarFreeSegnitz
@CarFreeSegnitz Ай бұрын
Yes, that’s how microphones work. The sound compresses the piezo which gives off a minute signal. It still needs amplification before it’s useful and far too low to run the cell signal.
@vylbird8014
@vylbird8014 Ай бұрын
@@CarFreeSegnitz No, there is such a thing as a sound-powered telephone. It's just coupled moving coils: You talk loudly in to one, and you get sound out the other. Faint, but good enough to hold a conversation. It's the electronic version of two cans and a piece of string. Only good for short cable runs and point-to-point operation, but they can operate with no external power and are very reliable, so they have a niche in emergency communications. Especially marine applications - even if the ship's electrical systems are utterly dead, the sound-powered telephones still connect vital locations to the bridge. Batteries have a finite lifetime and may be neglected during servicing, but the sound powered telephone will always work so long as the cable isn't broken.
@user-yy9hk9od9u
@user-yy9hk9od9u Ай бұрын
Lightning can be harnessed and the energy stored one day.
@michaelblacktree
@michaelblacktree Ай бұрын
Wait. There's a bacterium named after smegma? LOL 🤣
@UPLYNXED
@UPLYNXED Ай бұрын
How about a vacuum? Only theoretical as of yet as far as I'm aware, but Quantum Energy Teleportation is a fascinating concept. It's not magically generating energy, but to an observer on just one end of the transaction it might as well be.
@mrdonetx
@mrdonetx Ай бұрын
Who thought you could? Pretty much everyone who worked on the projects and many others who know that energy is energy doesn't matter what form it happens to be. It's converting that energy into energy we can use for our own purpose efficiently is where it becomes a problem.
@zagarak
@zagarak Ай бұрын
It would have been funny if he said "Hey vsauce Michael here". 😂😂
@white_isnt_a_race2338
@white_isnt_a_race2338 Ай бұрын
You could cover 2% of the Sahara desert with solar panels and have enough power to charge the planet
@isaaclove1144
@isaaclove1144 Ай бұрын
How about the triboelectric effect? kzfaq.info/get/bejne/f595dqp1vpmqc2g.html
@derride4n614
@derride4n614 Ай бұрын
if we are harnessing electricity out of plants, how far are we technologically from getting it from other beings?. also, is there are reason not mentioning the term "nuclear fission" when talking about the plutonium-238 engine?
@hyperionsama8114
@hyperionsama8114 Ай бұрын
Question about sound energy. Does this mean a guitar (or some other instruments) can power themselves? Can my electric guitar power itself and have a speaker made in/with it???? 😅
@tru7hhimself
@tru7hhimself Ай бұрын
your guitar already powers itself. it has no power source but transmits electric signals to your amp.
@fishybusinessco.8398
@fishybusinessco.8398 Ай бұрын
Do you know we’re using a radioactive rock more than 10,000 miles away to run a machine it’s crazy. We are crazy.
@fugithegreat
@fugithegreat Ай бұрын
I was wondering about Nikola Tesla's ideas about generating and transmitting electricty through the air rather than through cables. Was he onto something there?
@vylbird8014
@vylbird8014 Ай бұрын
They get revived by enthusiasts all the time. The short version is that it works, but it's severely impractical. He was able to make practical demonstrations, but only illuminating very small discharge lamps at short range, and to achieve that he needed a two-hundred-kilowatt transmitter. The inefficiency is extreme. If you wanted to power a city like that, you'd need to generate a field so intense it would reduce everything in the vicinity to a seething plasma.
@FZs1
@FZs1 Ай бұрын
The problem with hydrogen is not that you have to burn it (oxidising is the same as burning anyway), but that you have to make/extract hydrogen from something. Making it from water requires all the same energy you get back when you burn it, while getting it from fossil fuels is cheap but not green at all.
@srquack27
@srquack27 Ай бұрын
hamter weel
@omatic_opulis9876
@omatic_opulis9876 Ай бұрын
hamser heel*
@anonymeister123
@anonymeister123 Ай бұрын
hammer*
@pranavgawade1546
@pranavgawade1546 Ай бұрын
Both 1.2 L engines are turbo petrol. Difference is that one is MPFI engine while other is GDI.
@_andrewvia
@_andrewvia Ай бұрын
She's in Reid's chair! Does Reid know about this?
@hamiljohn
@hamiljohn Ай бұрын
BP sure thinks that we can't figure out what they've done
@marybell8995
@marybell8995 Ай бұрын
potato!!
@davidlundy2312
@davidlundy2312 29 күн бұрын
She's pretty 😁, hopefully that wasn't rude and is well received. Thanks for all the great vids and content 👍
5 Unexplainable Mysteries Explained by Science
14:14
SciShow
Рет қаралды 3,7 МЛН
Why Does Everything Decay Into Lead
13:50
SciShow
Рет қаралды 1,5 МЛН
100❤️ #shorts #construction #mizumayuuki
00:18
MY💝No War🤝
Рет қаралды 20 МЛН
Be kind🤝
00:22
ISSEI / いっせい
Рет қаралды 21 МЛН
когда достали одноклассники!
00:49
БРУНО
Рет қаралды 3,5 МЛН
MOM TURNED THE NOODLES PINK😱
00:31
JULI_PROETO
Рет қаралды 15 МЛН
The 6 Strangest Places on Earth | SciShow Compilation
22:20
SciShow
Рет қаралды 8 МЛН
Why Some Designs Are Impossible to Improve: Quintessence
33:03
Design Theory
Рет қаралды 1,4 МЛН
What Jumping Spiders Teach Us About Color
32:37
Veritasium
Рет қаралды 1,8 МЛН
We Were Wrong About Gold's Origin
13:02
Dr Ben Miles
Рет қаралды 133 М.
How This New Heat Pump is Genius
18:03
Undecided with Matt Ferrell
Рет қаралды 730 М.
How Electricity Actually Works
24:31
Veritasium
Рет қаралды 10 МЛН
Mercury Shouldn't Be Liquid. But It Is.
11:52
SciShow
Рет қаралды 1 МЛН
How Bridge Engineers Design Against Ship Collisions
28:45
Practical Engineering
Рет қаралды 801 М.
15 ENERGY EFFICIENT INVENTIONS FOR YOUR HOME
15:01
TechZone
Рет қаралды 872 М.
Converting devices to USB Type-C
16:25
DIY Perks
Рет қаралды 7 МЛН
100❤️ #shorts #construction #mizumayuuki
00:18
MY💝No War🤝
Рет қаралды 20 МЛН