Editor's Choice


Nick Denbow’s European report: Benefiting from technology transfer between modern industries

January 2018 Editor's Choice

This month, I take a different look at how technology can be transferred between industries, and used to solve heart-wrenching problems. Always touted as the birthplace of new technology applications, Formula 1 racing constructor Williams Racing, based near Oxford, is actually saving 50 Sainsbury supermarket stores in the UK around 15% of their bill for electrical power. This is nothing to do with speeding up the shopping, but because they can make the refrigerated cabinets more efficient. Using the technology of the aerodynamically-efficient rear wing on the Williams F1 car, a similar aerofoil device attached to the front of the shelves in the refrigerator keeps the cool airflow inside the cabinet. An added benefit is that this makes the temperature in these cold aisles up to 4°C higher than before, making the customers happier – and maybe stay longer! The device is being manufactured by a spin-off company, Aerofoil Energy, and will be rolled out across 1400 of Sainsbury’s UK supermarkets.

Sir James Dyson, the British engineer and inventor responsible for novel designs of vacuum cleaner, hand-dryer and hairdryers, has announced that his company is developing an electric car, using his own expertise in electric motors and battery technology. He sees the major market for the car in Asia, and will use his air filtering technology to protect the occupants from the fumes from other vehicles on the road.

Following hard on the heels of this announcement, the first self-driving shuttle bus was introduced into regular service in Las Vegas. On the first day of operation, the bus was providing free trips round a 1 km loop, at 25 km/h max: during one circuit, it met a lorry doing an illegal reversing manoeuvre. As programmed, the bus detected the lorry and stopped, but the lorry driver (human) continued his move and hit the shuttle, damaging the front bumper. He received a ticket for ‘illegal backing’. No-one was hurt and the shuttle, which has no steering wheel or brake pedals, continued providing free trips round this loop for the rest of the day.

Motor neuron disease (MND)

MND, otherwise known as ALS, or Lou Gehrig’s disease, is a rapid muscle wasting auto-immune disease. Sufferers need mobility aids delivered quickly, as any delivery delay makes them no longer suitable. Typically the time span from diagnosis to death is two years, but the brain is unaffected throughout. The exception to this timescale, somehow, is Professor Stephen Hawking, the theoretical physicist at Cambridge, who is still alive after over 50 years. I saw him there, being wheeled along in his chair, working on a screen full of 0s and 1s, interrogating them by moving a facial muscle (in his cheek) which allows him to move a cursor. He comments: “I have experimented with eye tracking and brain-controlled interfaces to communicate with my computer. However, although they work well for other people, I still find my cheek operated switch easier and less fatiguing to use.” Work at Nottingham University has specialised in this area, and Prof. Hawking has helped their PhD students to test new systems.

It all started in 1997, when Hawking happened to meet Gordon Moore, the co-founder of Intel. Hawking lost his voice in 1985, when he contracted pneumonia and had an emergency tracheotomy. In ’97, he had an AMD processor for communication, so Moore fixed him up with an Intel microprocessor-based computer, and has worked with him ever since. A colleague contacted the CEO of WordsPlus, in California, who had developed a program (Equaliser) for a relative with ALS, to enable her to select commands and words. Equaliser was loaded onto an Apple device that drove a ‘SpeechPlus’ synthesiser. Hawking continued with conventional software behind his interface until 2012, when at 70 he was slowing down. An Intel team basically then loaded all his books and papers into the predictive text algorithms, a system known as ACAT (assistive contextually aware toolkit). As an example, when Hawking writes ‘the’, the system offers ‘black’, and then ‘hole’. This once more speeded up Hawking’s communications interface.

There are now many systems available for MND sufferers, to interface to emails and speech synthesis, using eye movement sensors such as those from Eyegaze. More importantly in a practical sense, is that these can also be used to drive and steer their wheelchair motors, to enable some semblance of independence and continued communication for the people living with these problems.

Nick Denbow spent 30 years as a UK-based process instrumentation marketing manager, and then changed sides – becoming a freelance editor and starting Processingtalk.com. Avoiding retirement, he published the INSIDER automation newsletter for five years, and then acted as their European correspondent. He is now a freelance Automation and Control reporter and newsletter publisher, with a blog on www.nickdenbow.com





Share this article:
Share via emailShare via LinkedInPrint this page

Further reading:

STEMulator – a gift to the youth of the nation
Editor's Choice News
STEMulator is a groundbreaking virtual platform designed to ignite the spark of curiosity in young minds and stimulate their interest in STEM subjects.

Read more...
Innovate, accelerate, dominate
Festo South Africa Editor's Choice Pneumatics & Hydraulics
Festo’s latest innovations, revealed through the Ramp Up Campaign, offer a blueprint for performance excellence, using the anatomy of a race car as an analogy to simplify and powerfully communicate how their technologies address industry challenges.

Read more...
Case History 198: Cascade control overcomes valve problems.
Editor's Choice Flow Measurement & Control
There are many processes where it is undesirable for the load to suddenly change quickly, for example in the paper industry. Examples of level control have involved reasonably fast tuning. An example of a level loop tuned this way and responding to a step change in setpoint is given.

Read more...
Advanced telemetry solutions
Editor's Choice Industrial Wireless
Namibia is one of the driest countries in sub-Saharan Africa, with an average annual rainfall below 250 mm. To address this challenge, the Namibia Water Corporation has employed one of southern Africa’s most powerful and well-proven telemetry solutions, designed and manufactured by SSE/Interlynx-SA.

Read more...
Navigating the future of intralogistics
LAPP Southern Africa Editor's Choice
In the rapidly evolving landscape of global markets, the demand for agility, efficiency and scalability in intralogistics has never been more critical. At LAPP Southern Africa, we stand at the forefront of this transformation, offering cutting-edge connection solutions tailored to the dynamic needs of intralogistics.

Read more...
Cutting-edge robotics and smart manufacturing solutions
Yaskawa Southern Africa Editor's Choice
Yaskawa Southern Africa made a compelling impact at this year’s Africa Automation and Technology Fair.

Read more...
A cure for measurement headaches in contract manufacturing
VEGA Controls SA Editor's Choice
A contract manufacturing organisation provides support to pharmaceutical and biotechnology companies in the manufacturing of medications, formulations and substances. VEGA’s measurement solutions offer accuracy and reliability for monitoring levels and pressures during the manufacturing process.

Read more...
PC-based control for a food capsule and pod packaging machine
Beckhoff Automation Editor's Choice
For TME, a machine builder specialising in the packaging of powdered foods, Beckhoff’s PC-based control technology offers unlimited opportunities when it comes to performance and innovative capacity in terms of flexibility, scalability and openness.

Read more...
Simple and efficient level measurement in the mining, minerals and metals industries
Endress+Hauser South Africa Editor's Choice Level Measurement & Control
Measuring devices in the mining, minerals and metals industries face the challenge of varying material states and long distances in measurement height. Endress+Hauser’s answer to these challenges is the new Micropilot family.

Read more...
PC-based control for fertiliser
Beckhoff Automation Editor's Choice Fieldbus & Industrial Networking
On a farm in the USA, valuable ammonia is extracted from slurry and processed into ammonium sulphate. NSI Byosis has transformed this complex process into a flexible modular system. This modular approach requires an automation solution with flexible scalability in both hardware and software, which this Dutch company has found in PC-based control from Beckhoff.

Read more...









While every effort has been made to ensure the accuracy of the information contained herein, the publisher and its agents cannot be held responsible for any errors contained, or any loss incurred as a result. Articles published do not necessarily reflect the views of the publishers. The editor reserves the right to alter or cut copy. Articles submitted are deemed to have been cleared for publication. Advertisements and company contact details are published as provided by the advertiser. Technews Publishing (Pty) Ltd cannot be held responsible for the accuracy or veracity of supplied material.




© Technews Publishing (Pty) Ltd | All Rights Reserved