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science project help: batteries and heating element

i want to heat a soldering tool with batteries - or something that
could get as hot as a soldering tool.

i have a 30w soldering tool. (120 volt)

10 C batteries provide 1500 mAH of electricity each. in series this
will provide 15000 mA for the device right?

in a circuit with a 30w 120 v soldering tool... which requires
30/120=.25 amps or 250 mA(?)

and 10 x 1.2 volt rechargeable C batteries
makes 120 volts for 15000mAH used at 250mAH, so it could be on for 60
hours...???

i know my calculations are wrong. can you help me?
also, do you know if there are higher voltage rechargeable batteries
arround? any place to get custom rechargeable batteries?

how else can i heat up an element to give off the radiant heat of a
cigarret off battery power? any ideas?

thanks for your help.
max
 
L

Lord Garth

Jan 1, 1970
0
i want to heat a soldering tool with batteries - or something that
could get as hot as a soldering tool.

i have a 30w soldering tool. (120 volt)

10 C batteries provide 1500 mAH of electricity each. in series this
will provide 15000 mA for the device right?

in a circuit with a 30w 120 v soldering tool... which requires
30/120=.25 amps or 250 mA(?)

and 10 x 1.2 volt rechargeable C batteries
makes 120 volts for 15000mAH used at 250mAH, so it could be on for 60
hours...???

i know my calculations are wrong. can you help me?
also, do you know if there are higher voltage rechargeable batteries
arround? any place to get custom rechargeable batteries?

how else can i heat up an element to give off the radiant heat of a
cigarret off battery power? any ideas?

thanks for your help.
max

10 x 1.2 is not 120 ....

When batteries are in series, the voltage adds, not the current capacity.
 
A

Andrew Holme

Jan 1, 1970
0
i want to heat a soldering tool with batteries - or something that
could get as hot as a soldering tool.

i have a 30w soldering tool. (120 volt)

10 C batteries provide 1500 mAH of electricity each. in series this
will provide 15000 mA for the device right?

No. It's still only 1500 mAh. It doesn't matter what's in series with
them: the cells are flat in 1 hour if 1500 mA flows.
in a circuit with a 30w 120 v soldering tool... which requires
30/120=.25 amps or 250 mA(?)
Correct.

and 10 x 1.2 volt rechargeable C batteries
makes 120 volts for 15000mAH used at 250mAH, so it could be on for 60
hours...???

10 * 1.2 = 12 volts
100 * 1.2 = 120 volts
 
R

Robert Monsen

Jan 1, 1970
0
i want to heat a soldering tool with batteries - or something that
could get as hot as a soldering tool.

i have a 30w soldering tool. (120 volt)

10 C batteries provide 1500 mAH of electricity each. in series this
will provide 15000 mA for the device right?

No, the 1500mAH figure really means the capacity of the battery, which
has little relation to the maximum current that can be supplied.

A C battery probably can provide 10A maximum (maybe more, maybe less,
but lets assume 10A). Then the power output is 10A * the voltage, which
is 1.5V. Thus, the battery can provide 15W by itself, flat out.

However, assuming a perfect usage of the capacity, that means the time
it can do so is

1.5Ah / 10A = 0.15h or about 9 minutes.

In reality, using a battery in this way will drain it even faster than that.

If you put 10 of these is a series circuit, you can get 150W for 9 minutes.

If you need 30W, then you can do it for 45min before all the batteries
are used up.

Unfortunately, your soldering tool is 30W at 120V. That means that the
current through it when it's operating is 0.25A, so it's resistance is
120*4=480 ohms. If you put 10 C cells together, it'll be 15V. Thus, the
power dissipated by the iron will be

15^2 / 480 = 0.468W. It probably won't even get hot.

Thus, your idea isn't going to work without 120V, which means you need
80 batteries. However, they will last alot longer than 9 minutes at a
250mA drain.
in a circuit with a 30w 120 v soldering tool... which requires
30/120=.25 amps or 250 mA(?)

and 10 x 1.2 volt rechargeable C batteries
makes 120 volts for 15000mAH used at 250mAH, so it could be on for 60
hours...???

i know my calculations are wrong. can you help me?
also, do you know if there are higher voltage rechargeable batteries
arround? any place to get custom rechargeable batteries?

how else can i heat up an element to give off the radiant heat of a
cigarret off battery power? any ideas?

A cigarette gets to between 400 and 700 centigrade. That's pretty hot.
However, you might be able to use some kind of resistance wire to get
that temperature. There exist electric cigarette lighters, which clearly
get this hot, on a couple of AA cells.
thanks for your help.
max


--
Regards,
Robert Monsen

"Your Highness, I have no need of this hypothesis."
- Pierre Laplace (1749-1827), to Napoleon,
on why his works on celestial mechanics make no mention of God.
 
J

Jonathan Kirwan

Jan 1, 1970
0
In addition to other comments:

What is this "heat" to be used for? Are you trying to achieve the same
temperature as the tip of a cigarette, but can accept a smaller area? Or are
you trying to get the same net energy output per unit time as is released by a
cigarette tip, but don't really care if the temperature is exactly the same in
doing that? Or ... ? And how long does it need to operate?

Jon
 
i want to heat a small stream of air, about 2 leters. - roughly as hot
as the smoke of a cigarette.
it only has to be on intermitantly for periods of 5 seconds.

thanks for your help guys.
max
 
J

Jonathan Kirwan

Jan 1, 1970
0
i want to heat a small stream of air, about 2 leters. - roughly as hot
as the smoke of a cigarette.

Two _liters_ of air? It passes by as a stream? What is the volume per second,
here? What is the cross-sectional area where the heater is to be?
it only has to be on intermitantly for periods of 5 seconds.

Is this to actually replace a cigarette in someone's mouth? Is the rate of flow
to be determined by someone "pulling" on a tube?

Jon
 
C

Chris

Jan 1, 1970
0
i want to heat a soldering tool with batteries - or something that
could get as hot as a soldering tool.

i have a 30w soldering tool. (120 volt)

10 C batteries provide 1500 mAH of electricity each. in series this
will provide 15000 mA for the device right?

in a circuit with a 30w 120 v soldering tool... which requires
30/120=.25 amps or 250 mA(?)

and 10 x 1.2 volt rechargeable C batteries
makes 120 volts for 15000mAH used at 250mAH, so it could be on for 60
hours...???

i know my calculations are wrong. can you help me?
also, do you know if there are higher voltage rechargeable batteries
arround? any place to get custom rechargeable batteries?

how else can i heat up an element to give off the radiant heat of a
cigarret off battery power? any ideas?

thanks for your help.
max

Hi, Max. Apparently you've already run into one of the unofficial
rules of school science projects -- "You can't plug anything in".

There's another rule, which is unofficial but is enforced almost as
rigorously -- you can't do anything which has the capability to hurt
somebody.

I'd really suggest getting some guidance form the teacher or sponsor,
and get some assistance if necessary in changing your project to
something else. If you mention that an integral part of the project is
generating an airlow at close to 800 degrees F, I'm sure they'll
encourage you to try something else.

Good luck, and feel free to come back and ask for help once you've got
the next project idea.

Chris
 
thanks chris but i'm not in high school.

jon,
yes, the rate of flow is to be determined by a suction on a tube and
i'm not sure what the cross sectional area around the heating element
will be.

i was imagining a ceramic tube of maybe a 1/4 inch and a heating coil
of about 1/8 inches in diameter.

what are you thinking about?
 
C

Chris

Jan 1, 1970
0
thanks chris but i'm not in high school.

jon,
yes, the rate of flow is to be determined by a suction on a tube and
i'm not sure what the cross sectional area around the heating element
will be.

i was imagining a ceramic tube of maybe a 1/4 inch and a heating coil
of about 1/8 inches in diameter.

what are you thinking about?

Sorry, Max. Didn't mean to offend, but nearly all the "science
project" posts here have to do with science fair stuff for grade school
or high school.

If you could back away from the trees for a minute, try to look at the
forest to get an idea of the power you'll need. If you didn't have the
line voltage restriction, I would recommend something like the small
Ungar electric heat gun I use for shrink tubing. That's 250 watts,
which will give you an idea of the current required at 12VDC (20 amps
plus). This doesn't look like a job for "C" batteries.

You could probably "home brew" this with a small 12VDC marine battery,
a bunch of heavier gauge nichrome resistance wire, ceramic or mica
forms to keep the wire in place, and a small 12VDC fan. I would think
that something like the nozzle of a heat gun or small hair dryer would
be what you want to make. If you have access to a trickle charger, you
could use an automotive battery.

If you want to go this route, you'll have to preheat the nichrome wire
before you turn the fan on to let it get up to temp. I'm also not sure
how much control you can have over the temperature at startup, but with
a little experimentation, you can get close to a desired temp for the
whole 2 liters of air. Be sure to weld hi-temp electrical connectors
to the nichrome wire if you want good non-resistive electrical
connections.

Good luck
Chris
 
J

Jonathan Kirwan

Jan 1, 1970
0
yes, the rate of flow is to be determined by a suction on a tube and
i'm not sure what the cross sectional area around the heating element
will be.

i was imagining a ceramic tube of maybe a 1/4 inch and a heating coil
of about 1/8 inches in diameter.

Is the suction rate fluctuating, as if a person were drawing on it? Or is it
mechanically determined so that the flow rate can be predicted with fair
accuracy? (The two liters you mention is suggestive to me of our lungs, which
if you blow out fully and then draw in to refill might be just about 2 liters.)
Does the temperature of the air need to be controlled? Or can it be allowed to
vary widely, depending on the rate of air flow across it? How long is the tube
and at what point does the temperature need to be established? What range of
ambient air temperature at the intake needs to be tolerated?
what are you thinking about?

Well, I'm still just trying to get a picture of the intentions, here. It helps
to get an accurate answer, if there is an accurate question in mind. I'm still
not even sure if what you are trying to control is the temperature of the air or
something else. For example, you may just want the average temperature of the
total 2 liters to be some value, but since it is all going to be mixed into some
container (lungs, for example), it isn't important to you to maintain this for
each tiny bit of flowing air and you can accept a wide variation, so long as the
mixed temperature is about where you set it. I've no idea if you can use the
mixing chamber, if it should exist, for your temperature measuring point. Etc.

It is simply hard to have any precise thoughts, without all the details in hand.

Jon
 
thanks chris for your advice. you too jon.

a marine batery would be too big for the device i would like to build.
i want to build a portable device, no bigger than a nerf football. i
thought making a series of 4 C batteries would allow for the ideal
size, but i got tripped up with my equations.

so there is a line voltage restriction. and that restriction is what
ever we can fit into a small set of rechargeable batteries. 4D ? 6D? a
special order battery? (is there any place to do this?)

no fan is needed. a person will blow into one end of the football,
through a heated chamber at the end and want to be able to brown a
piece of paper on the other side, but not ignite it. the paper would be
held very close to the end of the heat chamber. room temperature air.
could be fluctuating, as long as its hot enough to dry out paper. does
that satisfy your questions jon about the air temperature?

so chris, is a nichrome wire a heating element? any idea where i can
get a wire that draws low current but puts out the most heat? would
soldering the wire's together work? i've never welded something so
small.

thanks again for the dialogue, i hope i answered your questions well.
max
 
J

Jonathan Kirwan

Jan 1, 1970
0
thanks chris for your advice. you too jon.

a marine batery would be too big for the device i would like to build.
i want to build a portable device, no bigger than a nerf football. i
thought making a series of 4 C batteries would allow for the ideal
size, but i got tripped up with my equations.

so there is a line voltage restriction. and that restriction is what
ever we can fit into a small set of rechargeable batteries. 4D ? 6D? a
special order battery? (is there any place to do this?)

no fan is needed. a person will blow into one end of the football,
through a heated chamber at the end and want to be able to brown a
piece of paper on the other side, but not ignite it. the paper would be
held very close to the end of the heat chamber. room temperature air.
could be fluctuating, as long as its hot enough to dry out paper. does
that satisfy your questions jon about the air temperature?

so chris, is a nichrome wire a heating element? any idea where i can
get a wire that draws low current but puts out the most heat? would
soldering the wire's together work? i've never welded something so
small.

thanks again for the dialogue, i hope i answered your questions well.

Oh, my. Sounds like a gag or a magic trick. Blowing into the end of an
innocuous device that makes it look as though you are just blowing air and
instead you are toasting some paper.

By the way, paper is fairly dry and your breath will probably be a lot moister.
What I'd now like to know is what does it take to get paper to brown and what
does it take to hit the "flash point" before, during and after browning. My
hunch is that there isn't a lot of margin to work with, safely. One advantage
that comes to mind here is that breathing out means that the air won't have as
much oxygen in it for the side of the paper on the receiving end of the flow.
That may help the flash-point margin some. Then there is the fair moisture
content and possibly mucous particles and bacteria, etc. You plan to keep this
clean?

A calculating approach to take is to think this way:

* Less than 2 liters of heated air blowing across a specified area of paper,
must be sufficient to brown it, as desired.

* Time for those 2 liters (or less) to be blown will be about ... ? ... 6 or 7
seconds. Volumetric air flow is thus (assuming a typical volume of about 0.8
liters) something like 150 cc/s.

* How large of an area of paper must be browned?

* How far away will the paper be held? (The further the air has to travel after
being heated, the more you'll lose in turbulence and mixing before it reaches
the paper.)

* Can the air flow be focused through the use of some kind of mechanical
"lensing" to a known distance ahead? (I don't know.)

* What is the rate at which heat will diffuse away through convection outward
from the heated spot through the paper and also to the air behind the paper?

* What temperature is required in the air used in order to compensate for the
losses and still heat the paper at the required rate?

But I don't think all that is needed. Forget theory and just go empirical.

Probably the easiest way for you to find out what works will be to arrange some
nichrome wire to cover the near-exit aperture of your tubing, set up an AC
desktop-type powered DC supply that will allow you to set the current used to
heat the nichrome, and then start running some tests with different current
settings and trying out your abilities to heat the paper adequately. One you
figure out the necessary heating, you can write down the current setting and the
voltage used across the nichrome and the product of these will tell you the
wattage. That will then tell you what kind of battery arrangement you'll need
and how long it will last.

Another possibility might be to consider using a halogen flash lamp with a
parabolic or (more likely) a spherical reflector. You might be able to brown
paper in a single flash pulse from one. Forget the air flow, entirely.

Another possibility might be to use myriad tiny ceramic capillaries (perhaps
only 1 cm long, each) stacked into a honeycombed grid. A simple chemical flame
(butane, for example) would jet from a tiny tube behind the grid, ignited by a
piezo-igniter, and would be immediately diffused into an even heat by the
capillaries, so that when the flow exited it would be very uniform without hot
spots in it. Chemical energy in hydrocarbons is very dense and probably a lot
better than some battery would be. However, I'm not entirely sure how to
arrange this with using a breath blown through to automatically adjust the tiny
flame to correspond with the flow rate -- some kind of venturi?

Jon
 
C

Chris

Jan 1, 1970
0
thanks chris for your advice. you too jon.

a marine batery would be too big for the device i would like to build.
i want to build a portable device, no bigger than a nerf football. i
thought making a series of 4 C batteries would allow for the ideal
size, but i got tripped up with my equations.

so there is a line voltage restriction. and that restriction is what
ever we can fit into a small set of rechargeable batteries. 4D ? 6D? a
special order battery? (is there any place to do this?)

no fan is needed. a person will blow into one end of the football,
through a heated chamber at the end and want to be able to brown a
piece of paper on the other side, but not ignite it. the paper would be
held very close to the end of the heat chamber. room temperature air.
could be fluctuating, as long as its hot enough to dry out paper. does
that satisfy your questions jon about the air temperature?

so chris, is a nichrome wire a heating element? any idea where i can
get a wire that draws low current but puts out the most heat? would
soldering the wire's together work? i've never welded something so
small.

thanks again for the dialogue, i hope i answered your questions well.
max

Hi, Max. Nichrome wire (also called resistance wire) is the stuff used
in electric heating elements for space heaters, toasters, hair dryers,
etc. The nickel-chromium alloy has a reasonable bulk resistivity, as
well as being resistant to oxidation at high temperatures. Also, the
bulk resistivity is somewhat constant over temperature range (usually
+/-10 to 20% from cool to red hot). These qualities make it suitable
for heating applications. The least expensive source for nichrome wire
is discarded toasters, space heaters, hair dryers, and power resistors.
Nichrome wire can also be purchased from a number of sources.

Since nichrome wire glows red hot when heated, solder isn't a good
idea. It will melt. Also, nichrome wire doesn't "wet". Your solder
will just sit on top of the wire like a blob of glue, and will open up
the first time its heated. Resistance wire is typically welded to a
hi-temp electrical connector in order to get a good connection (even
"gas-tight" electrical connections suffer when subjected to extreme
thermal expansion/contraction cycles).

Before you get too far here, I think you should do some science. Look
at the thermal mass of air, determine what kind of power source you
require to heat two liters of air to exactly what temperature (paper
eventually burns at 451 degrees, but you'll need air much hotter than
that to cause instantaneous browning of a sheet of paper). Also
remember that exhaled breath can be assumed to have 100% humidity,
which will drastically increase the heating requirement. Experiment by
following Mr. Kirwan's advice, and set up a heating element with a
bench power supply and try to get what you want. You'll probably go
through several iterations on your heater setup. This will give you a
handle on your power requirements. You'll have to look at finding a
method to ensure the safety of the person who's blowing through the
football (i.e. not burning their lips off).

Once you're there (these are not insurmountable problems), you can then
take a look at your power source. Just as a WAG, you're going to need
at least several hundred watts to your heaters for those five seconds
or so. There is no way 4 or 6 "C" or "D" batteries can provide that,
much less rechargeables. If I absolutely had to take a stab at doing
this job in this way, and money was no object, I might consider a bank
of Polapulse batteries (Polaroid P100). Each one can reliably provide
5 amps at 6V for at least 12 seconds. If you need only 300 watts
(almost certainly you'll require a lot more than that), you should be
able to fit 10 of these in easily. They're small and can provide high
currents for limited times, but they're fairly expensive (and you would
have to replace the bank of batteries after every other use). But it's
theoretically possible you might be able to fit the whole thing into a
spheroid the size of a nerf football. If you even consider this route,
be ABSOLUTELY sure you thermally insulate the batteries as well as your
volunteer's lips from heat (the MSDS shows possibility of hazardous
gases if they burn, and you're looking at a high probability of
inhaling here), or have your volunteer quarterback stop the clock by
hurling the football out of bounds immediately after use.

Polaroid data sheet on P100 batteries:
http://www.polaroid.com/global/prin...4488338439&bmUID=1107857297463&bmLocale=en_US

MSDS on Polapulse batteries:
http://www.polaroid.com/service/msds/m_0658.pdf

Summary: Hot idea, but severe practical problems with power
requirements. Safety issues that cannot be ignored. Cost a major
constraint. Seriously consider either abandoning project or
drastically revising specifications (Mr. Kirwan's butane idea above
looks to me to be a far more practical way to accomplish this).

Good luck, and be careful
Chris
 
interesting ideas guys.

what about my 30w soldering tool though? i've done some tests with this
and it provides more than enough heat. this identifies how much
electricity this would take. is there no way to provide this amount of
current with rechargeable batteries? what about batteries for an
electric car or drill? it seems to me these devices could provide a few
short bursts of current to heat a coil.

i'm going to run some tests on various wire and the soldering tool. how
can i adjust the voltage coming out of a computer power supply to do
that jon?

and the butane/ ceramic setup sounds interesting. would heating the
metal element with butane happen faster? what about heating the metal
element with fire, letting it "charge" for a few seconds, till its red
hot - then blowing once the fire is out? that sounds like it would be a
lighter device, with maybe even grater danger problems if it holds a
tank of gas and ignites in a small hand held shape. also i'm concerned
about the user breathing in butane fumes - all though as i recall this
gas burns pretty clean.

but for the electrical tests - can i get some kind of electricity valve
to connect to the power supply ?

thanks chris and jon for your participation - you've really helped me
flesh out this idea.
max
 
R

Robert Monsen

Jan 1, 1970
0
interesting ideas guys.

what about my 30w soldering tool though? i've done some tests with this
and it provides more than enough heat. this identifies how much
electricity this would take. is there no way to provide this amount of
current with rechargeable batteries? what about batteries for an
electric car or drill? it seems to me these devices could provide a few
short bursts of current to heat a coil.

Power = Voltage^2/Resistance

The resistance is fixed. Thus, since heat = power, you have to have the
same voltage, ie, 120V to get the same heat. This has nothing to do with
the maximum current a battery can supply; without the same voltage, the
current will be limited by that resistance.

--
Regards,
Robert Monsen

"Your Highness, I have no need of this hypothesis."
- Pierre Laplace (1749-1827), to Napoleon,
on why his works on celestial mechanics make no mention of God.
 
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