How giant toasters could power the world - Rachel Yang

11,239 views ・ 2025-03-11

TED-Ed


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

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In 1919, American mechanic Charles Strite
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invented something humanity had desired for millennia:
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the automatic toaster.
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Various cultures had long toasted their bread over fire
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in a process that required constant attention and produced uneven results.
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But in 1905, toast technology evolved with the invention
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of a new nickel and chromium composite.
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When an electric current ran through these filaments,
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they would overflow with energy and radiate heat.
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And since the flexible metal could be coiled to match the dimensions
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of a standard slice of bread, this heat could be dispersed evenly—
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perfectly toasting an entire slice all at once.
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The only problem left was overcooking,
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which Strite’s model addressed with an automatic timer
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that simultaneously shut off the heating element
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and launched finished toast skyward.
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Strite’s appliance would’ve been the best invention since sliced bread,
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except that sliced bread was actually invented later to accommodate toasters.
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But today, there's a new contender for the world's most important toaster.
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And instead of heating up bread, this machine uses similar technology
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to toast bricks, rocks, and molten salt
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to solve one of Earth’s most pressing concerns.
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Every year, industrial manufacturers spend a huge amount of energy
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generating heat to make everyday materials and objects.
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These heat-dependent manufacturing processes for things
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like cement, steel, paper, and food
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currently comprise roughly 20% of our annual global energy consumption.
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And since most companies use fossil fuels to reach these high temperatures,
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industrial heat also accounts for 20% of our annual global carbon pollution.
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Thankfully, this is where our giant toaster comes in.
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This century-old technology is much more efficient than fossil fuels
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at generating heat.
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Meanwhile, the bricks, rocks, and molten salt we mentioned earlier
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are cheap, abundant, and excellent at storing heat—
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if they’re heated evenly.
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Which, of course, is the toaster’s specialty.
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So by toasting these toasting these materials,
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we can store heat as energy in what’s known as a heat battery.
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To see this in action, let’s look at a brick heat battery.
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These large bricks have been threaded with heating elements
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like you’d find in a toaster
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and molded with interlocking blocks that leave channels for air and heat.
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Then they get placed inside a chamber roughly 12 by 12 meters large.
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When turned on, the metal in the bricks bakes them to temperatures
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as high as 1,800°C.
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And since the entire giant toaster is encased in insulating steel,
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less than 1% of the heat escapes each day,
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enabling the brick to store hundreds of megawatts of energy—
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enough to power hundreds of homes for a month.
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When it’s time to use this energy,
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air or other gases are funneled up through the channels,
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raising the gas’ temperature up to 1,700°C.
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Then the scalding air can be used to heat a space, turn water into steam,
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or run any other heat-dependent manufacturing systems.
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These incredibly high temperatures are the true innovation of heat batteries.
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Many industrial heating processes require temperatures over 200°C,
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and historically it hasn’t been technically practical
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or financially feasible
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to reach those temperatures without burning fossil fuels.
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But heat batteries can slowly store energy over a long period of time
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and then let it all out in short spurts of extreme heat.
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And this slow storage approach also helps solve another problem.
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While wind and solar are currently the cheapest form of electricity on Earth,
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these technologies only generate electricity when the wind is blowing
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and sun is shining.
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But by storing that energy in heat batteries,
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we can use it later regardless of the weather.
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When all these pieces are in place,
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heat batteries are one of our cheapest and most sustainable battery technologies.
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For generating industrial heat,
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they’re more than twice as efficient as fossil fuel combustion,
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and roughly half the price of buying power from the grid.
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And best of all, this technology is ready to go today.
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It’s just a matter of incentivizing companies to invest
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in swapping their old technology for the toasters of the future.
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