Wednesday, March 3, 2010

Indian MIT alumnus wins Innovator of the Year award

Washington, March 3,2010 :

By Arun Kumar

An Indian alumnus of Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT)
has won the Innovator of the Year honour from Technology 
Review India by designing an ultra lightweight jacket to 
keep one cool in hot summers.

A postgraduate in Mechanical Engineering and Technology Policy 
Programme from MIT, Kranthi Kiran Vistakula's jacket 
weighing 650-700 gm can keep a user's body
between 18 and 40 degrees Celsius in temperatures
ranging from minus 30 to plus 50.
Vistakula's "heat exchange" technology called 
ClimaCon has applications beyond the apparel space,
finding uses in infant incubators and cooling large 
spaces such as auditoriums.

But it was a personal need that saw him working
on the jacket, says Technology Review, 
the oldest technology magazine published by MIT.

"While pursuing my Masters at MIT, 
I found the process of putting on and taking 
off additional layers of clothing in winter very
cumbersome. To overcome this inconvenience,
I started working on developing a jacket with the 
capacity to both heat and cool. I put the Peltier effect
into application for achieving this purpose," says Vistakula.
But it was easier said than done. For Vistakula soon realised
that a new technology would have to be developed to
make the jacket lightweight and to both heat and cool.

"I had to work on developing a new heat exchanger or
heat sink in order to keep the jacket light. 

After three years' worth of effort and experimentation,
the weight of the jacket stands at just 650 grams,
almost equivalent to the weight of a regular pair of jeans," 
he says proudly.
Vistakula will be formally awarded the
"Innovator of the Year" title 
as MIT's Technology Review
Jason Pontin unveils the list of India TR35-innovators
under the age of 35 in Bangalore next week.

Vistakula will be demonstrating his innovation to a 
packed hall of scientists and attendees from MIT 
among others at the Emerging Technologies conference, 
EmTech India on March 8.
The heat exchanger was designed to make 
use of the breakage of hydrogen bonds for the
dissipation of heat rather than the conventional 
methods of using a fan or cooled liquid for heat 
removal. 

A hydrogen bond self-recharging nanomaterial
was used to work in extreme conditions.
"The jacket can be worn and carried around
like a normal jacket with up to eight hours of 
performance on a single charge of batteries.
It can also be cleaned and cared for like normal jackets," 
explains Vistakula.

Vistakula's venture, Dhama Apparel Innovations,
was selected as one of the top 100 technology 
companies in Asia and top 200 technology companies
in the world by Red Herring magazine.
"Dhama's products are more efficient and light weight 
as compared to its competitors like Texas cool vest, 
Arctic heat, and Frisby technologies," he says.

Dhama's product team is also working closely with 
the army to develop a solution for heating/cooling missiles,
which will increase the performance and reduce various
tangible and intangible costs incurred by the army, said 
Harshal Shah, CEO of Reliance Technology Ventures Limited,
that has invested in Vistakula's venture.

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