HomeTechnologyPhotonicsWorld's Fastest Information-Fueled Engine Designed by University Researchers

    World’s Fastest Information-Fueled Engine Designed by University Researchers

    Simon Fraser University researchers have designed a remarkably fast engine that taps into a new kind of fuel—information.

    The development of this engine, which converts the random jiggling of a microscopic particle into stored energy, is outlined in research and could lead to significant advances in the speed and cost of computers and bio-nano technologies.

    SFU physics professor and senior author John Bechhoefer says researchers’ understanding of how to rapidly and efficiently convert information into “work” may inform the design and creation of real-world information engines.

    “We wanted to find out how fast an information engine can go and how much energy it can extract, so we made one,” says Bechhoefer, whose experimental group collaborated with theorists led by SFU physics professor David Sivak.

    Engines of this type were first proposed over 150 years ago, but actually making them has only recently become possible.

    “By systematically studying this engine, and choosing the right system characteristics, we have pushed its capabilities over ten times farther than other similar implementations, thus making it the current best-in-class,” says Sivak.

    The information engine designed by SFU researchers consists of a microscopic particle immersed in water and attached to a spring which, itself, is fixed to a movable stage. Researchers then observe the particle bouncing up and down due to thermal motion.

    “When we see an upward bounce, we move the stage up in response,” explains lead author and Ph.D. student Tushar Saha. “When we see a downward bounce, we wait. This ends uplifting the entire system using only information about the particle’s position.”

    Repeating this procedure, they raise the particle “a great height, and thus store a significant amount of gravitational energy,” without having to directly pull on the particle.

    Saha further explains that “in the lab, we implement this engine with an instrument known as an optical trap, which uses a laser to create a force on the particle that mimics that of the spring and stage.”

    Joseph Lucero, a Master of Science student, adds, “In our theoretical analysis, we find an interesting trade-off between the particle mass and the average time for the particle to bounce up. While heavier particles can store more gravitational energy, they generally also take longer to move up.”

    “Guided by this insight, we picked the particle mass and other engine properties to maximize how fast the engine extracts energy, outperforming previous designs and achieving power comparable to molecular machinery in living cells, and speeds comparable to fast-swimming bacteria,” says postdoctoral fellow Jannik Ehrich.

    ELE Times Research Desk
    ELE Times Research Deskhttps://www.eletimes.ai
    ELE Times provides extensive global coverage of Electronics, Technology and the Market. In addition to providing in-depth articles, ELE Times attracts the industry’s largest, qualified and highly engaged audiences, who appreciate our timely, relevant content and popular formats. ELE Times helps you build experience, drive traffic, communicate your contributions to the right audience, generate leads and market your products favourably.

    Related News

    Must Read

    New LX4580 – Highly Integrated 24‑Channel Mixed‑Signal IC for Aviation & Defence Actuation Systems

    Microchip Technology announces the LX4580, a 24‑channel mixed‑signal IC designed...

    TI redoubles advancement of next-gen physical AI with NVIDIA

    Texas Instruments announced accelerating the safe deployment of humanoid...

    Everspin Advances High-Reliability xSPI MRAM Portfolio With Complete Production Qualification for 64Mb MRAM

    Everspin Technologies, the world’s leading developer and manufacturer of...

    R&S acquires SRS, specialists in SDR communications solutions

    Rohde & Schwarz acquired Software Radio Systems (SRS), a...

    Differentiating Between LPDDR6, LPDDR5, and LPDDR5X

    Courtesy: Synopsys Advances in memory standards are driving faster and...

    Arrow Electronics and Infineon introduce 240W USB-C PD 3.2 reference design for battery-powered motor control applications

    Arrow Electronics and Infineon Technologies AG have announced REF_ARIF240GaN, a...

    Robotics Engineering: The Architectural Evolution Behind IT–OT Convergence

    Factories today operate as dense mechanical ecosystems, whether in...

    How AI Is Transforming Network Protocol Testing in Software-Defined Networks?

    As enterprises accelerate toward cloud-native infrastructure, edge computing, and...

    What is Fashion Tech? Providing New Product Value and Customer Experiences with Technology

    Courtesy: Murata Electronics What is fashion tech? - diverse technologies...