Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Emerging Tech
  3. News

Typhoon-powered wind turbine aims to siphon energy from a force of nature

Add as a preferred source on Google

According to the Environmental Protection Agency, the uppermost layer of Earth’s oceans are warming at a rate of 0.2 degrees Fahrenheit per decade. As the oceans warm, scientists predict a future filled with increasingly more powerful hurricanes and tropical storms. These massive weather phenomena can create wind speeds greater than 150 miles per hour. This is, of course, a tremendous amount of energy.

With our growing reliance on clean wind energy, it was only a matter of time before someone attempted to tap into typhoon energy. Challenergy, a pioneering Japanese engineering firm, believes it is ready to harness the power of a raging Mother Nature.

Engineer Atsushi Shimizu with his typhoon-grade wind turbine
Engineer Atsushi Shimizu with his typhoon-grade wind turbine Challenergy

Typhoons wreak havoc on many nations, resulting in a loss of human life, as well as millions of dollars in damage. Japan knows this all too well, with an average of nearly three typhoons making landfall on the Asian Pacific nation annually. Engineer Atsushi Shimizu hopes his new invention, the world’s first typhoon-powered wind turbine will help the nation power itself in the decades to come.

Recommended Videos

The Atlantic Oceanographic & Meteorological Laboratory claims that a single typhoon can produce the kinetic energy equivalent to roughly 50 percent of the world’s electrically generated energy. A lone typhoon would theoretically create enough energy to power Japan for nearly half a century. Moreover, Japan imports about 84 percent of its energy, meaning this technology could greatly increase the nation’s energy independence.

Japan has tried to use European wind turbine models to capitalize on typhoons in the past. Unfortunately, these models were never meant for such scenarios and tend to fail during such extreme conditions. Challenergy looks to succeed where all other green energy companies have so far failed.

Shimizu’s turbine is rather innocuous to behold. The contraption looks more like an industrial-sized egg beater than it does your run-of-the-mill wind turbine. The compact design is aimed at helping to minimize the risk of structural failure. While traditional wind turbines use more a triad of blades on a single rotary, this typhoon model includes three independent cylinders. These cylinders look to utilize what is known as the Magnus effect. This design capacity allows the turbine to harness wind coming from several directions rather than being limited to a single directional wind like traditional turbines.

The Challenergy team claims its turbine is capable of withstanding typhoon-strength winds and then some. Shimizu believes his invention can withstand winds up to 80 meters per second. We’ll have to wait to see just how much of Mother Nature’s wrath this turbine can actually take. The model has tested well in the laboratory, but the turbine has yet to face an actual typhoon. Shimizu and his team hope to  have their revolutionary turbine ready by 2020, just in time for the Olympic Games in Tokyo.

Dallon Adams
Former Editorial Assistant
Dallon Adams is a graduate of the University of Louisville and currently lives in Portland, OR. In his free time, Dallon…
Robots can now ‘see’ touch thanks to a new color-changing tactile sensor
Researchers have developed a color-changing tactile sensor that turns pressure into visible information.
Robot Touch Human Finger

Most robots are pretty good at seeing, but touching? That's been a much tougher problem. While humans instinctively know how hard they're gripping a coffee mug or pressing a button, robots have traditionally relied on complex arrays of tiny sensors to estimate the same thing. Now, researchers at Queen Mary University of London believe they've found a much simpler solution: make touch visible.

A sensor that turns touch into color

Read more
Chrome is getting better at understanding the breaks and punctations you never say out loud
Voice typing in Chrome is about to feel much more natural
Google Chrome on Android Featured

Google is quietly making voice dictation in Chrome feel a lot more natural. With the latest Chrome 151 Beta, the company is introducing a new capability that allows the browser's speech recognition engine to automatically infer punctuation based on the way people speak, eliminating the need to explicitly say commands like "comma" or "full stop."

The update may sound minor at first glance, but it addresses one of the biggest frustrations with voice typing: speaking naturally often produces text that lacks punctuation unless users consciously dictate every punctuation mark. By teaching Chrome to understand pauses, rhythm, and speech patterns, Google is taking another step toward making conversations with computers feel more human.

Read more
Horror films play music to warn about danger. These headphones use the same trick to save you from robots
Spherephones replaces factory alarms with music that tells you what is coming and from where.
spherephones-georgia-tech

The ear has always processed what is coming before the eye does. In horror movies, the music always tells you something bad is coming. Now researchers at Georgia Tech are using the same idea in real life to keep factory workers safe around robots.

They have built a wearable headset called Spherephones that converts nearby robot movement into spatial music, giving you a warning before a machine gets too close. It helps the user stay aware without breaking their attention.

Read more