Ebuses in use by KAIST students, and amusement park e-trams in Seoul

http://www.azocleantech.com/news.aspx?newsID=17985
[image] KAIST’s On-line Electric Vehicle Project Recognized as One of 10
Emerging Technologies
Feb 15 2013  Source: kaist.edu

[image  / Hyung-Joon Jeon, KAIST PR Office
http://www.azocleantech.com/images/news/NewsImage_17985.jpg
This is an OLEV shuttle bus that provides ride services to students and
faculty at KAIST campus in Daejeon, Korea
]

The Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology (KAIST) announced
today that its research project, On-line Electric Vehicle (OLEV), was
included in the ten most promising technologies in 2013.

The selection was made by the Global Agenda Council on Emerging
Technologies, one of 88 global agenda councils under the World Economic
Forum.

OLEV technology uses inductive coupling and wireless electromagnetic
transmission to power electric vehicles (cars, buses, vans, etc.) during
operation. Under the bottom floor of an on-line electric vehicle is attached
with a pickup system that receives electromagnetic fields from power cables
installed under the road surface. The power is also used to charge an
on-board battery which is used to power the vehicle when it is off the power
line.

Currently, two commercial models of OLEV are up and running: buses and
trams. The buses are in daily use by students at the KAIST campus in
Daejeon, and the trams are in an amusement park for passengers' ride in
Seoul.

Other emerging technologies listed by the Global Agenda Council on Emerging
Technologies are 3-D printing, self-healing materials, energy efficient
water purification, CO2 conversion and use, enhanced nutrition to drive
health at the molecular level, remote sensing, nano-designed effective drug
delivery, organic electronics and photovoltaics, and 3rd and 4th generation
nuclear reactors and waste recycling.

Below is the full list of the ten technologies:

Top Ten Emerging Technology Trends in 2013 from the Global Agenda Council on
Emerging Technologies, World Economic Forum

On-line Electric Vehicle (OLEV):

OLEV technology uses inductive coupling and wireless electromagnetic
transmission to power electric vehicles (cars, buses, vans etc) during
operation. This is achieved by attaching pick-up coil sets under the bottom
floor of an electric vehicle in order to receive electromagnetic fields from
power cables installed under the road surface. The power is also used to
charge an on-board battery which is used to power the vehicle when it is off
line. These vehicles use one fifth of the battery of a normal electric
vehicle. With a ground height of 20cm and a 75kW power capacity, an OLEV can
achieve a transmission efficiency of 83%. These vehicles are currently
undergoing road tests in Seoul.

3-D Printing:

A fabrication process to create 3-dimensional solid structures from a
digitally originated design. The key distinction of this process as compared
with other, more conventional lithography techniques, is that it is
*additive* rather than subtractive. That is, the additional material is
deposited on top of the underlying layer to create a free-standing structure
from the bottom up. In standard patterning techniques, the material is
commonly removed to effectively carve out the feature of interest.
Specialized instruments, aka 3D printers, are generally required to be able
to print the features of interest. In such a 3D printing process, an object
can be made from scratch by following a computer aided design, CAD, file. 3D
printers are mostly used as prototyping tools because the process is still
time-consuming, expensive, and not 100% reliable.

Self-healing Materials:

The ability of materials to heal stems from structural elements, which are
capable of repairing damage caused by repeated (thermo) mechanical exposure,
often arranged hierarchically like in hard biological systems. Initiation of
cracks and damage on a microscopic level commonly leads to a change in
thermal, electrical, and acoustical properties. A man-made self-healing
material (some polymers, composites, ceramics, etc.) must have the ability
to heal itself without human or machine intervention. The process of healing
typically requires the application of either heat or electrical bias or some
other stimulus. The process of healing is not repeatable forever, because
the material(s) in the crack plane from previous healings would build up
over time.

Energy Efficient Water Purification:

Increasing water scarcity has led to the widespread use of reverse osmosis,
evaporation and other energy intensive techniques. Energy-efficient
technologies for water desalination such as those based on Forward Osmosis
can now be deployed modularly at large scale. Such approaches have been
shown to reduce energy consumption by over 50% and can utilize steam or heat
from a variety of renewable sources such as solar-thermal, geothermal and
industrial co-generation heat. Applications ranging from municipal and
industrial to recovered water in oil & gas applications can benefit from
such innovations.

CO2 Conversion and Use:

Large investments in CO2 capture and sequestration motivated by greenhouse
gas emission concerns have yielded no economically viable large scale
approaches to date. New technologies that consume/convert CO2 into saleable
goods can better address the need for carbon mitigation. Specifically, the
use of engineered photosynthetic bacteria producing secreted liquid fuels or
chemicals in modular, solar-converter systems offer a path for CO2 emitters
to generate revenues where they once had costs. These systems operate today
at the acre scale and are expected to reach 100's of acres during the next
18-24 months, with land productivities that are 10-100 fold greater than
comparable biofuels based on agricultural or algal feedstock. The same
platforms are now also being deployed to produce nutritional ingredients
such as pure human dietary proteins meant to augment or replace whey or soy
proteins.

Enhanced Nutrition to Drive Health at the Molecular Level:

The adverse health effects of human malnutrition are mainly modulated
through changing the composition and quantity of foods consumed. Modern
Genomic technologies have been applied broadly to the human diet in order to
identify at the sequence level the vast number of naturally consumed
proteins that are therefore Generally Regarded As Safe (GRAS) for human
consumption. Among them are proteins that individually have advantages over
current protein supplements/ingredients such as greater percentage of
essential amino acids, branched chain amino acids, solubility, taste,
texture and nutrition/calorie. Large-scale production of pure, human dietary
proteins tailored for health benefits such as in muscle development,
diabetes and obesity are underway based on applications of biotechnology to
molecular nutrition.

Remote Sensing (self-drive cars, for monitoring and communicating health,
etc.):

The more widespread use of sensors that allow often passive responses to
external stimulae will continue to change the way we respond to the
environment. Examples include increased uses of sensors to monitor bodily
function (heart rate, blood oxygen and sugar levels) which trigger a medical
response, whether it be insulin or simply a monitoring of a person
throughout their day. Advances rely on wireless communication between
devices, low power sensing technologies and sometimes active energy
harvesting. Other examples include vehicle-to-vehicle sensing for improved
safety.

Nano-designed Effective Drug Delivery:

The molecularly localized delivery of pharmaceuticals only where needed
offers unprecedented opportunities for more effective treatments while
dramatically reducing their side effects. Targeted nanoparticles that adhere
to diseased tissue allowing for the delivery of potent therapeutic compounds
while minimizing their impact on healthy tissue, are now advancing in
clinical trials. After almost a decade of research, these new approaches are
finally showing early signs of clinical utility, increased local
concentration and exposure time of the drug and in some cases showing
effectiveness not seen with the drug compound alone. These recent advances
in nanomedicine promise to improve the effects of current drugs as well as
rescuing others that cannot otherwise be developed due to dose limiting
toxicity.

Organic Electronics and Photovoltaics:

Organic, also known as printed electronics, means the use of organic
materials such as polymers to create electronic circuits and devices. In
contrast to traditional silicon based semiconductors, organic electronics
can be printed using ink jet techniques making them extremely cheap compared
with silicon devices, both in terms of the cost per device and the capital
equipment required to produce them. While organic electronics are unlikely
to compete with silicon in terms of speed and density, the availability of
low cost devices, from sensors to displays is a key step in enabling the
'Internet of Things.

3rd and 4th Generation Nuclear Reactors and Waste Recycling:

Current-generation once-through nuclear power reactors only utilize 1% of
the potential energy available in uranium, leaving the rest radioactively
contaminated as nuclear 'waste'. Whilst the technical challenge of
geological disposal is manageable, the political challenge of nuclear waste
is considerable. Recycling and breeding uranium-238 into new fissile
material would extend current uranium resources for centuries, allowing
nuclear power to make a major contribution to the world's low-carbon energy
production. The resulting fission product waste is radioactive for hundreds
of years, not tens of thousands, making eventual disposal less of a
challenge even than most conventional hazardous waste from other industries.
Fourth-generation metal-cooled fast reactors are now close to deployment in
several countries and are offered by established nuclear engineering
companies.
[© 2013 AZoCleantech]



http://www.koreaittimes.com/story/26754/kaist%E2%80%99s-online-electric-vehicle-olev-named-one-world%E2%80%99s-top-10-most-promising-technologie
KAIST’s Online Electric Vehicle (OLEV) Is Named as One of the World’s Top 10
Most Promising Technologies
Sean Chung, [email protected]  Feb 15 2013

[image  
http://www.koreaittimes.com/images/artimgpreview2_2.jpg
]

SEOUL, KOREA – On Thursday, the Korea Advanced Institute of Science and
Technology (KAIST) announced that the KAIST Online Electric Vehicle (OLEV),
an electric vehicle using electromagnetic induction, was named as one of the
world’s top 10 most promising technologies by the World Economic Forum
(WEF).

Since 2012, the WEF, also known as the Davos Forum, has picked the world’s
10 most promising technologies through its Global Agenda Council on Emerging
Technologies.

The KAIST OLEV is an eco-friendly vehicle that is charged in a wireless
manner. It has a special electricity collecting device underneath it, so its
battery is charged through non-contact magnetic induction produced from
electric power strips that were buried 15cm underneath the road.

Its adoption of non-contact magnetic charging method has dramatically
reduced the size of its battery.  Beside, the OLEV can be charged even while
on the move.

Back in 2010, the OLEV was also selected as one of the world’s top 50
inventions by American weekly news magazine Time.
...
http://english.etnews.com/electronics/2715655_1303.html





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