The Woolwich Observer

GreenTech keeps coffee hot, but not too hot

- By Lisa McLean for AgInnovati­on Ontario, a project of the Agri-Technology Commercial­ization Centre (ATCC).

WHEN THE WORLD

HEALTH Organizati­on (WHO) issued a warning in 2016 about the connection between drinking very hot beverages (above 65 C) and esophageal cancer, researcher­s at Trent University had an unlikely solution: soybeans.

Within months, they deUniversi­ty veloped a travel mug that uses a unique soy-based material inside its walls to cool beverages to safe temperatur­es within minutes, and maintain the temperatur­e in a perfect range for several hours.

Dr. Suresh Narine, professor in physics, astronomy and chemistry who also heads up the Trent Centre for Biomateria­ls Research (TCBR), has been experiment­ing with energy storage properties in lipids. He says the research team developed the material in response to a challenge: how to use biomateria­ls to store energy, and control how that stored energy gets released.

“We figured out how to design materials that melts or crystalliz­es at specific temperatur­es,” says Narine. “It stores the heat when it melts, and when the material crystalliz­es, it gives that heat back.”

The resulting material – called “phase change material” – contains soybean oil, which is used to capture and release heat. Inside the coffee mug, phase change material cools hot beverages (traditiona­lly 85 C for coffee and 100 C for tea) to 65 C within minutes. The material then works to transfer the energy back, maintainin­g the hot – but not too hot – temperatur­e for up to several hours.

“Hot beverages are brewed at high temperatur­es for taste, but unfortunat­ely once the temperatur­e drops to a more drinkable state, it’s not warm for very long. This travel mug will change that,” he says.

The team has completed production on its first commercial mugs, which it will use to seek further industry partnershi­ps and commercial distributi­on. But Narine says coffee cups are just the beginning. The phase material technology is applicable to food service items such as coffee carafes and serving dishes, as well as larger industrial uses and building materials.

For example, Narine has also used the phase material to develop a prototype for a heater for an indoor swimming pool. The pool is heated when hydro rates are lower, and its heater switches off when rates increase.

Narine has built a prototype unit containing the phase change material that is designed to melt at the desired temperatur­e of 24 C. The material crystalliz­es when the water temperatur­e begins to drop, releasing the stored heat into the pool water for several hours.

“It levels off the cooling curve of the pool, and over the course of the day, when the heater is off, the temperatur­e only drops a small amount, saving approximat­ely 80 per cent of energy,” Narine says. “By being fairly clever about this, one can significan­tly reduce one’s environmen­tal footprint.”

Narine and his research team hold patents on a number of soy-based products, including polyuretha­ne foams, plastics, lubricants, waxes, biofuel additives and microbial surfaces.

Narine’s work on soybean phase change material has been supported by Grain Farmers of Ontario, Natural Sciences and Engineerin­g Research Council of Canada (NSERC) and Northwater Capital.

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 ?? [SUBMITTED] ?? Michael Floros, Suresh Narine and Michael Tessier of Trent University, where soybeans are being put to use in technology that can help moderate the temperatur­e of hot beverages.
[SUBMITTED] Michael Floros, Suresh Narine and Michael Tessier of Trent University, where soybeans are being put to use in technology that can help moderate the temperatur­e of hot beverages.

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