AUGUST 9, 2004 

DEVELOPMENTS TO WATCH 



Illumination 
Brighter LEDs Could Give Lightbulbs The Boot

Light-emitting diodes are likely to replace
old-fashioned bulbs someday. They use a fraction of
the power and can last 100 times as long. Yet while
they have shown up in car signals and traffic lights,
LEDs have so far been too costly to supplant the bulbs
and tubes that light houses, offices, and factories.

Cheaper, brighter LEDs may soon make inroads in these
spaces, too. A group led by E. Fred Schubert,
professor of electrical engineering at Rensselaer
Polytechnic Institute, has patented a new design for
LEDs using "omni-directional reflectors" (ODRS) that
amplify total light output. Compared with conventional
LEDs, they deliver up to twice as much light, says
Schubert. The key is the ODRs' ability to reflect
photons even at extreme angles. Current designs,
Schubert adds, often convert these photons into heat
rather than emit them as light.

The new diodes will be cooler and more reliable, and
each application will require fewer of them. That,
plus the fact that the manufacturing process doesn't
change much, should help bring prices down. One LED
maker is ready to test the new design, and devices
could be on the market in three years.


By Adam Aston 



Illumination 
Sizing Up Earthquakes Before They Happen

Cities can prepare for earthquakes more effectively
and cheaply if they know the maximum potential threat
along certain sections of a fault, says Charles Rubin,
a professor at Central Washington University in
Ellensburg.

How can they find out? Rubin and his colleagues dug
trenches parallel to the San Andreas Fault northeast
of Los Angeles to study large earthquakes that
preceded a famous quake in 1857. Examining multiple
extinct river beds and measuring how they were cleft,
they found that the quake-induced gaps from six large
earthquakes all measured roughly 7.5 meters. To get
this much slip, each quake must have produced ruptures
about 220 miles long, and had a magnitude of 7.5 to 8,
Rubin says. He is studying other earthquake zones in
Taiwan and the U.S. to test the thesis that quakes
along each discrete portion of a fault occur at
roughly the same magnitude.





Illumination 
A Juicier Battery For Electric Cars

BatScap, a French company, has a lithium-polymer
battery that may inspire auto makers to produce more
environmentally friendly cars. The technology has
already been proven in smaller devices such as
laptops, cameras, and iPods, but BatScap says this is
the first such battery that's large enough to power a
vehicle.

A unit of conglomerate Bolloré, BatScap spent $85
million and 12 years developing the cell. In an
electric car, it would need recharging only once every
120 to 180 miles, BatScap claims, and could go 93,000
miles without needing to be replaced. Vincent Bolloré,
CEO of the parent company, says running his battery
will cost consumers just 2 cents a mile, saving owners
$2,500 a year in gasoline and other costs. He hopes to
show it off in an electric car at the Salon Automobile
de Genève next March.

The batteries may not fully address one of the biggest
complaints about electric cars: poor performance. But
the same technology could bring big benefits to
gas-electric hybrids, says BatScap.


By Jasper Perkins 



Illumination 
Of Rainforest Bugs And Medicinal Sponges

-- For years scientists have assumed that insect
attacks on plants limit biodiversity in the
rainforest. But when researchers from the University
of Utah and the National University of the Peruvian
Amazon studied local insects interacting with
transplanted trees, they discovered the opposite.
Plants that devote energy to fending off insects grow
more slowly -- a handicap that sometimes prevents them
from taking over whole terrains at the expense of less
hardy species. The bugs thus help preserve the variety
of niches and habitats, says University of Utah
graduate student Paul Fine.

-- Drug-resistant malaria, a growing scourge in many
parts of the world, may meet its match in a humble
shallow-water sponge. Scientists at L'Institut de
Recherche Pour le Développement (IRD) in Paris say
members of the sponge genus Phloeodictyon, found near
New Caledonia, contain substances with antimalarial
properties -- compounds not found in the deepwater
varieties. In nature, says IRD chemist Cécile Debitus,
the protective molecules may serve to fight off
parasites unique to shallow waters.


By Daryl Hannah 

 



The McGraw-Hill Companies Inc. 


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