Showing posts with label technology. Show all posts
Showing posts with label technology. Show all posts

Wednesday, 4 March 2015

Electrical current from pure plant power! CAMBRIDGE SCIENCE FESTIVAL top!


Dear Readers,
 
Extremely proud to unveil one of the most exciting projects I have been involved to date.

I had the privilege of developing the concept and design of an extraordinary urban hub which incorporates avant-garde technologies generating power. Yes! Real power. Real energy. 

The project has been carried out in cooperation with green technology companies including MCMM, Polysolar and Scotscape. The BPV project includes scientists from the Departments of Biochemistry, Plant Sciences, Physics and Chemistry at the University of Cambridge, together with the University of Edinburgh, Imperial College London and the University of Cape Town.

http://www.cam.ac.uk/research/news/low-impact-hub-generates-electrical-current-from-pure-plant-power

Below is the authentic press release from the University of Cambridge!

See you all the Botanic Garden in Cambridge UK during the Science Festival 9-22 of March 2015 organized by the University of Cambridge.

 http://www.sciencefestival.cam.ac.uk/events/trap-light-fantastic-plant-power-fully-booked


 


UNIVERSITY OF CAMBRIDGE PRESS RELEASE

For immediate release

Low-impact hub generates electrical current from pure plant power

Green wall technology and semi-transparent solar panels have been combined to generate electrical current from a renewable source of energy both day and night.
 


A prototype “green bus shelter” that could eventually generate enough electricity to light itself, has been built by a collaboration of University of Cambridge researchers and eco-companies.

The ongoing living experiment, hosted by the Cambridge University Botanic Garden and open to the visiting public, is incorporated in a distinct wooden hub, designed by architects MCMM to resemble a structure like a bus shelter. Eight vertical green wall units – created by green wall specialists, Scotscape – are housed along with four semi-transparent solar panels and two flexible solar panels provided by Polysolar.

The hub has specially adapted vertical green walls that harvest electrons naturally produced as a by-product of photosynthesis and metabolic activity, and convert them into electrical current. It is the brainchild of Professor Christopher Howe and Dr Paolo Bombelli of the Department of Biochemistry. Their previous experiments resulted in a device able to power a radio using the current generated by moss.

The thin-film solar panels turn light into electricity by using mainly the blue and green radiation of the solar spectrum.  Plants grow behind the solar glass, ‘sharing the light’ by utilising the red spectrum radiation needed for photosynthesis, while avoiding the scorching effect of UV light. The plants generate electrical currents as a consequence of photosynthesis and metabolic activity during the day and night.

“Ideally you can have the solar panels generating during the day, and the biological system at night. To address the world’s energy needs, we need a portfolio of many different technologies, and it’s even better if these technologies can operate in synergy,” said Bombelli.

The structure of the hub allows different combinations of the photovoltaic and biological systems to be tested. On the north east aspect of the hub, plants receive light directly, without being exposed to too much direct sun. On the south west orientation, a green wall panel is housed behind a semi-transparent solar panel so that the effect on the plants and their ability to generate current can be monitored. Next to that, in the same orientation, a single solar panel stands alone, and two further panels are also mounted on the roof.

 “The combination of horticulture with renewable energy production constitutes a powerful solution to food and resource shortages on an increasingly populated planet,” explained Joanna Slota-Newson from Polysolar. “We build our semi-transparent solar panels into greenhouses, producing electrical energy from the sun which can in turn be used to power irrigation pumps or artificial lighting, while offering a controlled environment to improve agricultural yields.  In this collaboration with Cambridge University, the public can experience the plants’ healthy growth behind Polysolar panels.”

The green wall panels in the hub are made from a synthetic material containing pockets, each holding a litre of soil and several plants. The pockets are fitted with a lining of carbon fibre on the back, which acts as an anode to receive electrons from the metabolism of plants and bacteria in the soil, and a carbon/catalyst plate on the front which acts as a cathode. 

When a plant photosynthesises, energy from the sun is used to convert carbon dioxide into organic compounds that the plant needs to grow. Some of the compounds – such as carbohydrates, proteins and lipids – are leached into the soil where they are broken down by bacteria, which in turn release by-products, including electrons, as part of the process.

Electrons have a negative charge so, when they are generated, protons (with a positive charge) are also created. When the anode and cathode are connected to each other by a wire acting as an external circuit, the negative charges migrate between those two electrodes. Simultaneously, the positive charges migrate from the anodic region to the cathode through a wet system, in this case the soil. The cathode contains a catalyst that enables the electrons, protons and atmospheric oxygen to recombine to form water, thus completing the circuit and permitting an electrical current to be generated in the external circuit.

The P2P hub therfore generates electrical current from the combination of biological and physical elements. Each element of the hub is monitored separately, and members of the public can track the findings in real time, at a dedicated website (http://www.plantsci.cam.ac.uk/p2p) and on a computer embedded in the hub itself.

Margherita Cesca, Senior Architect and Director of MCMM Architettura, the hub’s designer, is pleased that it has garnered so much interest. “This prototype is intended to inspire the imagination, and encourage people to consider what could be achieved with these pioneering technologies. The challenging design incorporates and showcases green wall and solar panels as well as glass, creating an interesting element which sits beautifully within Cambridge University Botanic Garden,” she said.

Bombelli added: “The long-term aim of the P2P solar hub research is to develop a range of self-powered sustainable buildings for multi-purpose use all over the world, from bus stops to refugee shelters.”

P2P is an outreach activity developed under the umbrella of the BPV (BioPhotoVoltaic) project working in collaboration with green technology companies including MCMM, Polysolar and Scotscape. The BPV project includes scientists from the Departments of Biochemistry, Plant Sciences, Physics and Chemistry at the University of Cambridge, together with the University of Edinburgh, Imperial College London and the University of Cape Town.

The innovative prototype solar hub will be unveiled at the Botanic Garden during an event at the Cambridge Science Festival, Trap the light fantastic: plant to power, on Tuesday 10 March.

 

-END-

Notes:

For more information, please contact: Louise Walsh, University of Cambridge Communications Officer, Email: louise.walsh@admin.cam.ac.uk or call +44 (0)1223 765443/07941117904

Interviews and pictures available on request.
 
 

Friday, 4 April 2014

How to be Visible + Social Media for BUSINESS

I have recently been invited by Anglia Ruskin University in Cambridge to give a talk and advice during Creative Fronts which took place last month.
The event consisted in a series of talks and one-to-one sessions which would help students and graduates to understand how to set up and run a business in the creative industries.
The creative industries have long been an overlooked sector in Cambridgeshire! 
Creative Fron in association with Anglia Ruskin University have created the network because they believe that if everyone in the creative sector got together, a powerful community of individuals and organisations would form!

My presentation to students and graduates focused on the importance of being visible and social media when starting up a business. Learning how to use social media for marketing, to benefit your business and enhance your reputation is an asset that all entrepreneurs should have. 
  • How to use Twitter, Facebook and Instagram to increase your visibility with potential client?
  • How my practice won work using social media as marketing tool? 
  • How you can use LinkedIn to create your powerful network of collaborators?
In addition I have discussed what our practice looks for when hiring new talent, which applies to other sectors as well. In 2011 I founded MCMM Architettura Ltd, an Interior Design and Architectural practice which is generating success and satisfaction for me but most importantly for my clients. 

If you wish to know more about the presentation or about our business, please do get in touch! Happy to answer all your questions and enquiries! 

Ciao!
MCMM 

http://www.creativefront.org/
www.arcitetturamcmm.com








Wednesday, 4 December 2013

Raspberry Pi or Pie..?!?

Exactly what I was asking myself yesterday when I've been invited to attend a local creative group.
Rachel Rayns, artist-in-residence at Rasperry Pi illustrated with enormous passion her fantastic work with this extraordinary new platform. 
Rasperry Pi, as you've might got it, it's not a cake ;-)
Raspberry Pi is a credit-card-sized computer created by ARM as educational tool with the aim of promoting computer science in schools. This capable little computer plugs into your TV and a keyboard and can be used in electronics projects as well as spreadsheets, word-processing and games. It also plays high-definition video. 


Kids are tremendously good at it! It's fascinating to watch a 5 year-old typing codes away and create an interactive game by simply using this tremendous platform! Technology gallops! I used to play with Lego in my not-so-old-days! 

Walking home I suddenly realised how little we know. Every discipline is becoming more and more specialised and our brain simply doesn't have enough space to capture and hold all this information. 
It's so intriguing, especially for creative souls like me, to discover new platform, new opportunities, new challenges and be able to implement them and create an extraordinary new experience. 
As Christmas is coming up, I might get a Raspberry Pi and literally start playing with it..


Ciao!
You can find out more and appreciate the technology by viewing Rachel's work here: http://www.raspberrypi.org/archives/4329
Other useful websites:
http://www.raspberrypi.org/
http://www.themagpi.com/
http://www.creativeely.co.uk/