AÑO
2017
CATEGORÍA
Hogar
OBJETIVOS
Ciudades y comunidades sostenibles
PAL. CLAVE
Smart Home, Energy Efficiency, electricity
PAÍS
United States of America
CRÉDITOS
Oak Ridge National Laboratory, University of Tennessee College of Architecture and Design, GE Appliances, IACMI The Composites Institute, Spiers New Technologies, Liberty Utilities, Mach Fuels, Techmer ES, KUB, Tru-Design, Axalta Coatings, DowAksa, Hexagon Lincoln, Johnson Controls, Line-X, EPB, Kawneer, Alcoa, Clayton Homes, Cincinnati Incorporated and NanoPore - Skidmore, Owings & Merrill
LINK
http://web.ornl.gov/sci/eere/amie/
AMIE 1.0
A Demonstration Project Integrating how we generate, use, and store energy
Energy is consumed every day as we drive our vehicles and live in our dwellings. Historically, these two energy streams have existed independently – until now.
Meet AMIE - the Additive Manufacturing Integrated Energy demonstration project. AIME is a combination of a 3D-printed house and a 3D-printed car that wirelessly share renewable energy. Each component feeds the other, enabling the system to run entirely off the grid if necessary. Because they’re made using additive manufacturing, the house and car could be replicated with minimal waste, and could even be recycled by breaking down the materials and using them to print something else.
The AMIE project changes the way we think about generating, storing, and using electrical power.