No power? How about a personal solar panel?

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=t_tGo3Ik3E8As a child in Mali, Abdrahamane Traoré often did his homework by the sooty, dim light of a kerosene lamp.As an adult in Michigan, he sometimes has a tough time reaching his family back home. Traoré’s mother must walk to a neighboring village to keep a cell phone charged.Electricity isn’t always a plug away in much of the developing world. That’s why Traoré and University of Michigan engineering student Md. Shanhoor Amin teamed up to develop the Emerald, a personal solar panel the size of a paperback.The young engineers are the founders of June Energy, an award-winning start-up spending its second semester in the TechArb student business incubator. The company recently received more than $500,000 in venture capital, and it’s about to ship its first 40 domestic orders. Amin and Traoré, along with chief technical officer Allan Taylor, are planning a trip to Kenya and Mali later this semester to test their prototype with the people it was primarily designed for.Amin, who will graduate in April with a master’s in energy systems engineering, says the Emerald is unique.”There are products now that offer either discrete lighting or basic electricity, but not both. And these products are expensive due to high internal component costs,” Amin said. “We’ve developed circuitry that solves both of these problems affordably.”The company’s goal is to get the price under $20 for its customers in the developing world.For lighting, the Emerald uses energy-efficient light-emitting diodes, or LEDs. It gives reading light for at least 8 hours.”Kerosene lamps provide 60 lumens of light, which is really not much,” Amin said. “It strains the eyes. Our product can give up to 100 lumens, which is really ample for reading at night time.”Other reasons the developers say the Emerald is better than kerosene: The fuel can get expensive, and it isn’t healthy to breathe in the lamps’ smoke. Kerosene is the primary cause of respiratory illness in regions where it is commonly used, Amin said.”I knew the lamp was harmful to my lungs, but I didn’t have access to anything better,” Traoré said.For cell phone charging, the Emerald has USB and cell phone ports and will come with a bag of adapters. It can fully charge a smartphone in the same time it would take at an outlet, developers say.It recharges in full sunlight in three hours.

For more information, visit the June Energy website.

Comments

  1. Mike Philson - 1999

    What an exciting product! This could be a great benefit to people in the developing world…and brings to mind all kinds of uses.

    Reply

  2. Marcia Kasabach

    Very exciting. How can I get one?

    You can get ordering information at the June Energy website. –Editor

    Reply

  3. yoeh ming ting yee - 1948

    It sounds wonderful.if it get more widely used, we can really become green energy, HOW CAN I GET THIS PRODUCT IF YOU ARE ALREADY MARKETING IT.

    Reply

  4. Matt Borus - 2009

    Sounds fabulous!

    Reply

  5. Susanne Curry - 1959

    This is such a viable instrument in terms of size and cost. My husband and I have sponsored a young Kenyan who stayed with us outside of Washington DC while on a tour of the USA with the Alliance High School Boys choir. He has fulfilled his first goal by graduating from Egerton University this past May. He lives in Nairobi and is still looking for employment but, that is not the reason I’m contacting you. It’s because I know he would love to speak to you about the product you have invented. He is from a poor and very rural village in Kenya and his large family still resides there. Perhaps it would serve you to email me. I also know of two other organizations in Kenya which are trying to better the lives of the people there. Congratulations on your ingenuity and outreach.

    Reply

  6. james friedman - 58BA, 61JD

    Now that’s great engineering. I’m so proud that these talented and dedicated youhg men are doing something for the world wearing Michigan colors.

    Reply

  7. Heller Lipsett - 1976

    They should set this up like Tom’s shoes – each one purchased sends 1 for free to third world countries!

    Reply

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