Monday, June 30, 2014

Non-Insulating Weight Blanket

The Idea

When I sleep I like to have a medium to heavy weight blanket on me. I'm also a little quirky because I also need to cover as much skin as possible, so I typically sleep with socks, long pants and long sleeves. On warm nights I obviously get too hot with all that insulation, so I have to toss the blanket and/or the clothes. This makes it more difficult for me to get a good night's sleep. I'm sure I could learn to live without all my securities, but I like to increase my quality of life when it's convenient. Some people grew up in more difficult circumstances where such securities are practically a necessity. These types of dependencies are commonly tied to autism and Down's syndrome. I identify with people on the spectrum and often suspect and joke that I, myself, am on the spectrum. I've remember one parent's story about how their high needs child would come home at the end of the school day and burrow into a pile of blankets to recover from the unpredictable social jungle that is called Junior High. So I've thought to myself, "Wouldn't it be nice to have the security without the added discomfort?" That's how I came up with my idea of the non-insulating weight blanket. It's a blanket of equivalent weight without the insulating properties. I want one of these blankets, but I can't find one sold anywhere, so I'm going to have to develop it myself.

 Progress

 My favorite blanket right now is a denim blanket made by my wife. It's about the perfect density and provides a secure level of pressure, but it probably falls on the lighter side of a good security blanket. It's 56 inches wide, 70 inches tall, and weighs 4.8 pounds. That's a pressure of 0.0012 psi (or 2.5 feet of air, 0.9 kg/m^3, 84 microbar, 8 pascal, etc.). I found some blankets made for people with sensory processing disorder. A blanket of similar size can be up to 25 pounds, but I think those are designed for temporary therapeutic relief and not meant to be used for an entire night. In any case it seems the acceptable range of pressure is fairly large.

Critical Ratio

My first inclination in such a design is to modify the thickness to possibly exploit the critical insulation ratio. When you insulate a round object the added insulation slows down conduction but speeds up convection. There is a critical insulation thickness such that when your insulation is below the thickness you speed up heat transfer by adding insulation. And when your insulation thickness is above critical adding insulation slows down heat transfer. So my first thought is to estimate the critical ratio for a blanket around a person.

Without going through a bunch of explanation (here's a good link for that) the critical ratio basically comes down to the rate of conduction vs the rate of convection, or k/h. I estimate the thermal conductivity (k) of a denim blanket to be around 0.04 W/m*K. Estimating the convection coefficient (h) is a little harder, but to just get in the very rough ball park let's think about a human body. The internal temp is 37 degrees C, and the room temp is 20C giving a delta of 17C (or Kelvins if you wanna be technical). Using a guess of 2 square meters of surface area, 80 Watts heat generation that gives around 2 W/m^2*K.

So that gives a critical radius of (0.04 W/m*K)/(2 W/m^2*K) = 2cm. So, um, you might be able to cool down a finger...but your whole body ain't gonna fit inside 2 centimeters.

Mesh and Material

If I can't win by changing the thickness of the blanket then I will have to remove some of the insulating material and turn the blanket into more of a mesh. That will cause a hit in density, so I'll have to modify the material composition to increase density. The ideal material would be thermally conductive, easy to wash, easy to sew or press, flexible and cheap.

Materialrho (gm/cm^3)k (W/m*K)WashableSew/PressFlexibleCost ($/lb)
Dirt / Earth
Polypropylene
 
 
 
 
 


Micro 3D Printer

While researching different 3D printers I found they all use stepper motors for positional control. It got me thinking what other technologies exist that could be used as replacements to improve cost, accuracy, etc. In my industry we use interferometers for nanometer-scale positioning. I wonder how this could be applied to 3D printing. I doubt it will be as cost effective as stepper motors, but it certainly will improve accuracy. Then I got wondering how small you could make a 3D printer. I haven't seen anyone compete for printing the smallest object yet. Well, if you count a FIB as a 3D printer then this doesn't really matter, but I'm still thinking objects observable with the human eye. It might be a fun way to show what the technology is capable of doing and possibly open up some new markets or applications. So for positioning control you could use simple, amateur interferometers. Maybe modify the kind used for amateur astronomy. There are other positioning technologies that might be better suited. This may also require a change in the actuators for improved accuracy.

Wednesday, June 25, 2014

Accomplishments and Rewards


This is yet another homework assignment from Barbara Sher to help discover more about what internally motivates me to pick up and drop activities, jobs, projects, and everything else. It's also another way to take time to appreciate the way my personal brain works and celebrate past accomplishments that I previously might have considered failures.

Here is a list of things I've done or accomplished and my personal reward gained from the activity:

Accomplishments
Learned Violin
Learned Cello
Learned Piano
Learned Guitar
Math Olympiad
MATHCOUNTS Best in High School
Chase Youth Award Nominee
High Jump Top Ten in School History
Long Jump Top Ten in School History
Air Force ROTC Scholar
JSHS Poster Presenter
Learned DOS
Learned Windows
Learned Linux
Built Countless Computers
Learned to Fix Computers
Discovered Why I'm on the Earth
Remote Access Apprentice
Math Minor
Chemistry Minor
Bachelors in Chemical Engineering
Masters in Electrical Engineering
Lean Six Sigma Green Belt
Learned to Program
Wrote Lego Tank Video Game
Wrote Skylander Video Game
Learned to Build Electronics
Hiked Lone Peak
Hiked Mt. Olympus
Built a Website for Work
Designed a Model for Auto Auction Prices,
Used Model to Get a Good Deal on a New Car
Became a Manager at Work
Built a 3D Printer
Rewards
Self-Mastery, Music
Self-Mastery, Music
Self-Mastery, Music
Self-Mastery, Music
Self-Mastery, Success
Self-Mastery, Success
Self-Mastery, Science
Self-Mastery, Success
Self-Mastery, Success
Self-Mastery, Flying, Career
Science
Self-Mastery, Computers, Video Games
Self-Mastery, Computers
Self-Mastery, Computers
Self-Mastery, Computers, Building
Self-Mastery, Computers, Helping Others
Ethics
Self-Mastery,  Career
Self-Mastery
Self-Mastery
Self-Mastery, Science, Career
Self-Mastery, Science, Computers, Career
Self-Mastery, Career
Self-Mastery, Improve Utility, Career
Computers, Video Games, Family
Computers, Video Games, Family
Computers, Building
Self-Mastery, Fun
Self-Mastery, Fun
Improve Utility, Career
Improve Utility, Discover
Save Money
Improve Utility, Career
Discovery, Fun, Save Money, Building

This is a work in progress, but I've already learned a few things about myself. My long-term passions are computers, gaming, science, and flying. I'm definitely driven by my desire to be great at what I do, and I want others to recognize my accomplishments. When I'm satisfied with my level of recognition or mastery I tend to move on to something else unless, like video games, I find continual entertainment. I like to take on projects that provide utility and help others, and I also tend to make decisions to save money and based on what I think is right or ethical. While I enjoy music, it doesn't provide the same propulsion that I get from science and computing.

Finally, I realize that I like to gain knowledge for the purpose of creating things.

A Place for Utility and Fun

Embracing my true Scanner self I followed the homework suggested by Barbara and created my "Living Quarters Map." It's a hand-drawn floor-plan of my house in which I've circled projects that I've either completed, started or conceived. Completed projects are circled in green, unfinished projects in magenta, and projects living only in concept are circled in red.

This is not ALL of my projects. There was a whole list of brainstorms that I must have deleted from my phone because I thought I would never get to them. There are also many completed projects that I didn't think worth adding to the list, because I want to spend the time on another project.

I hope soon to add some pictures of completed projects as well as some concept drawings.



Monday, June 23, 2014

What Kind of Tree Are You?

While looking for a new career one of the things I've been researching is different places to live. What kind of climate would I enjoy the most? I love long falls and springs so I started looking for climate data for U.S. cities to give me an idea of where to look for job ideas. As I read the descriptions for various cities, as pitched by the city websites, I noted that they frequently mentioned the types of flora in an attempt to promote their scenery.

I have a neighbor-friend who loves trees and everything about trees. He recites their genus, species, characteristics, climates, you name it. Trees have climates. They typically only grow where conditions are most suitable for that type of tree.

For fun my wife and I sometimes enjoy taking internet quizzes, even the stupid ones on Facebook. We often take them just to make fun of their absurdity. Recently we took a quiz on "What City Should You Actually Live In" which attempts to correlate food, drink and other random categories with ideal living conditions.

Wouldn't it be cool to redo the survey using a correlation that might have some actual chance of being based in reality?

What Kind of Tree Are You? First, take my neighbor's knowledge about trees and record it into a database. Particularly the bits about climate and characteristics, the kind of characteristics that could be related to human traits in a tongue-in-cheek fashion. The quiz will ask you about your personality traits and your climate preferences, and use them to correlate you to a type of tree. At the end of the quiz you get a report containing the tree's name, characteristics, and other pertinent details including the geographic areas where those types of trees thrive. Maybe you'd thrive there too, along with your kindred tree. I think the hardest part of the job would be collecting enough data regarding climate and tree types to give high geographic resolution. If the quiz only considered 15 of the top US cities then I would find it amusing at best, not a useful tool. But if it the database included details down to the county level, well that's a tool I'd actually consider using to make my next career move!

I'm a Scanner

This has been an exciting week for me. I read an online review of Barbara Sher's book, "Refuse to Choose!" Ever since I graduated with my Master's Degree in Electrical Engineering, over a year now, I've been soul-searching and brainstorming on what I'm going to do next in my career. It's been one of the more frustrating experiences in my life. Not the short-term type of frustration that you know will come and go. It's the long-term type of frustration like a chronic illness where you wonder if you will ever be okay again.

The mental framework for my self-discovery went something like this:
  1. Statistics have shown that people are happier when they work in professions that are aligned with their personal passion, ethics and morals.
  2. I'm unhappy at work, so my current position or career is not in line with my life-long passion.
  3. If I can discover the one thing that I'm truly passionate about then I can align my career and be work-happy again.
So I've spent the last year trying to find that one thing. That ... one ... thing.  
If only I could figure out my ONE true passion!

One year later, having considered hundreds of options, I came up empty handed. "There must be something wrong with me." I've had many discussions like this with trusted friends, most recently my wife, Jennyfer. "Nothing excites me so much that I want to do it forever. Am I depressed? I'm starting to feel depressed..." Funny as this may sound, I have often dismayed about the difficulty in choosing an avatar or picture to use in my online profiles, forums, blogs, email, etc. What one thing describes or defines me so much that it will be me representative picture to the world?! Well, I can't think of anything.

Luckily I'm not the only one who feels this way. Barbara Sher identified a class of individuals who can't happily confine themselves to a small range of interests, passions, hobbies or otherwise, and she coined the term "Scanners" to set them apart from the "Divers". For me this is a brand new discovery which has already lifted a great burden and catapulted me along my self-discovery process. The basic premise is that I don't have a single passion. I'm interested in many different things, and those things frequently change. And that's okay! 

The first thing Barabara recommends in her book is to create a "Scanner Daybook" to record "explorations."  She recommends a very formal physical book, something nice, to record the many varied ideas and interests that constantly come to mind. For me that's a problem because I hate to write. So instead I'm going to do this online, in the medium that I feel gives me a greater freedom of expression. This blog is going to be my Scanner Daybook. It's for me, but you're welcome to read.