45'22'
SENIOR MEMBER
- Joined
- May 10, 2012
- Messages
- 5,029
- Reaction score
- -6
- Country
- Location
CHENNAI: Ina few days from now, IIT-Madras will begin a project in a few hundred houses in the southern states aimed at eliminating load-shedding forever. IIT-M has developed a method that will let electricity boards provide a small amount of uninterrupted power to every house in the country, enough to run three lights, two fans and a mobile charger. The pilot project, which would go on for a few months, is expected to generate enough data for the power ministry to take a decision on extending the programme to the rest of the country.
It is based on a disarmingly simple idea: run a low-power direct current (DC) line from every sub-station into houses. This will feed into a separate meter, and then on to a set of lights and fans, or other low-power devices such as chargers or TVs. The rest of the house is run on regular alternating current (AC) power that is metered separately.
The 100 watts of power fed into these DC lines is so low the electricity boards will never need to shut this down, except to repair technical fault.Blackouts are thus eliminated at one stroke, or converted to what IIT-M calls 'brownouts'.
.
.
.
IIT-Madras project to supply low-power DC may end outages - The Economic Times
It is based on a disarmingly simple idea: run a low-power direct current (DC) line from every sub-station into houses. This will feed into a separate meter, and then on to a set of lights and fans, or other low-power devices such as chargers or TVs. The rest of the house is run on regular alternating current (AC) power that is metered separately.
The 100 watts of power fed into these DC lines is so low the electricity boards will never need to shut this down, except to repair technical fault.Blackouts are thus eliminated at one stroke, or converted to what IIT-M calls 'brownouts'.
.
.
.
IIT-Madras project to supply low-power DC may end outages - The Economic Times