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Hisashi Misawa's "Germ Heat": heating everything at half the cost.


Traveling northeast from Naka-Meguro (a Tokyo station) on the Hibiya Line you reach a sartorial sar·to·ri·al  
adj.
Of or relating to a tailor, tailoring, or tailored clothing: sartorial elegance.



[From Late Latin sartor, tailor; see sartorius.
 watershed. The yonder yon·der  
adv.
In or at that indicated place: the house over yonder.

adj.
Being at an indicated distance, usually within sight: "Yonder hills," he said, pointing.
 side of Higashi Ginza the men in Burberry suits and women in Prada have vanished, and workers in overalls and seniors with small shopping carts fill the car. You have passed through the business and fashion centers and are moving into the Shitamachi, the eastern quarter, where Old Edo is said to survive. Indeed this low-lying district along the Sumida River The Sumida River (隅田川, Sumida-gawa) is a river which flows through Tokyo, Japan. It branches from the Arakawa River at Iwabuchi and flows into Tokyo Bay. Its tributaries include the Kanda and Shakujii rivers.  is home to the sumo arena, the city's liveliest festivals, public baths and cottage industries. In the last named labor the shokunin (the artisans) fashioned things with pride and stubborn persistence.

A short walk from Naka-okachimachi Station, between Akihabara and Ueno on the Hibiya Line, in the heart of the Shitamachi, is the office of Hisashi Misawa. The location fits the man. He is a maker of things.

Misawa bounds into the room on the third floor of the pencil-narrow building. Only his shock of white hair gives away his 66 years. We have come to learn about his Germ Heater. He bubbles with enthusiasm as he explains.

He begins by recounting his brainstorm. Back in the mid-1990s a fire broke out at a semiconductor plant. Heat from a part had ignited a cleansing gas. In the aftermath, Misawa was asked if he could develop parts that generated less heat. The request sparked an idea. He knew, of course, that semiconductors give off heat, that is why transistors get hot, and personal computers. When a PC is in use, the electric current passing through its semiconductors and other parts, process information but also generate heat so an exhaust fan is needed. If the heat is not expelled, the data-processing function would be degraded.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

Misawa focused on Geranium geranium, common name for some members of the Geraniaceae, a family of herbs and small shrubs of temperate and subtropical regions. Their long, beak-shaped fruits give them the popular names crane's-bill (for species of the genus Geranium, , a grayish-white element with a metallic luster and electrical properties between those of a metal and an insulator insulator

Substance that blocks or retards the flow of electric current or heat. An insulator is a poor conductor because it has a high resistance to such flow. Electrical insulators are commonly used to hold conductors in place, separating them from one another and from
, which is to say, it is a semiconductor. Semiconductors are found in televisions, remote controls and other devices used in daily life.

He began researching and developing a heater utilizing what, until now, had been a semiconductor waste product, heat. He succeeded in generating heat through an application of a small amount of electricity to a semiconductor. What's more, he was able to regulate the temperature. He called his heater "Germ Heat" after Geranium, one of its principal materials. It uses half of the electricity of conventional electric heaters, Germ Heat is an epoch-making power source. Misawa exhibited a prototype at a trade fair in 2000.

Misawa takes a piece of black polymide film connected to an electric cord, he plugs the cord into an outlet atop a large table and invites us to touch the film. It is warm. "It heats up in a jiffy A fraction of time that has numerous interpretations depending on who uses it. It may refer to one computer clock cycle, one nanosecond, one millisecond or one AC power cycle. There may be others. See nanosecond.

1.
," he beams. He performs this simple demonstration with boyish boy·ish  
adj.
Characteristic of or befitting a boy: boyish charm.



boyish·ly adv.
 verve. Indeed, with respect to the joy of hands-on creation, the child still dwells in the man.

Hisashi Misawa was born in 1941 in Jinan, in the northwestern part of Shandong Province, China, where his father worked for the Japanese National Railways Japanese National Railways (日本国有鉄道  . After the war the family repatriated, taking up residence in Kobe. Hisashi attended the city's public schools. What distinguished him from other kids was a fascination with electricity. In the third grade he built a battery-operated three-story elevator for submission to a Hyogo Prefecture competition. He won first prize. Needless to say, when he matriculated at Osaka University Home to many elite and renowned alumni of CEOs, lawyers, doctors, scientists, bureaucrats, and a Nobel laureate, as well as to many advanced research centers, Osaka University is considered one of the most prestigious universities in Japan and Asia. , he selected electrical engineering electrical engineering: see engineering.
electrical engineering

Branch of engineering concerned with the practical applications of electricity in all its forms, including those of electronics.
 as his major.

Germ Heat can be adjusted for temperatures from 30 to 200 degrees, depending on the purpose. But is it safe? Although capable of generating high temperatures, it does not autoignite or release gas, explains Misawa. For these reasons it has found wide application in industry, for example, in heating railway cars and livestock pens and in preventing pipes from freezing.

We are skeptical. How can film be heated to 200 degrees without igniting? Misawa hurries to a lower floor and returns with a lighter and ash tray. A cigarette break? No, he cuts a strip of polymide film used to embed the Germ Heater and holds it over the ash tray. He puts its tip in the lighter's flame, it doesn't burn. Products are designed with films ranging from 30 to 200 degrees centigrade centigrade /cen·ti·grade/ (sen´ti-grad) having 100 gradations (steps or degrees); see under scale.

cen·ti·grade
adj.
Celsius.
 in maximum temperature. The film version of Germ Heat can produce a temperature of 280 degrees, although Misawa has yet to develop a product requiring such a high temperature.

Next he places atop the ashtray a white ceramic slate embedded with Germ Heat. He attaches alligator alligator, large aquatic reptile of the genus Alligator, in the same order as the crocodile. There are two species—a large type found in the S United States and a small type found in E China. Alligators differ from crocodiles in several ways.  clips and turns up the juice, a burnt smell reaches our nostrils, suggesting high temperature. Tempted to touch the slate, he warns us not to, the ceramic is too hot to handle. To re-emphasize the safety of his invention, he sets a scrap of paper scrap of paper

pre-WWI Belgian neutrality; German disregard precipitated British involvement. [Am. Hist.: Jameson, 450]

See : Controversy
 onto the plate, it doesn't burn. We think it should have gone up in smoke. He notices our puzzlement puz·zle·ment  
n.
The state of being confused or baffled; perplexity.

Noun 1. puzzlement - confusion resulting from failure to understand
bafflement, befuddlement, bemusement, bewilderment, mystification, obfuscation
 and explains, "Oxygen is required for combustion. No oxygen is being consumed, so there is no fire." We sheepishly sheep·ish  
adj.
1. Embarrassed, as by consciousness of a fault: a sheepish grin.

2. Meek or stupid.



sheep
 recall the fire triangle The fire triangle or combustion triangle is a simple model, from the science of firefighting, for understanding the ingredients necessary for most fires. It has largely been replaced in the industry by the fire tetrahedron  we were taught in school. Yes, one side was oxygen to sustain combustion. We all agree that the ceramic Germ Heat would be ideal for heating that necessity of Japanese daily life, the bathtub, or even a swimming pool. The ceramic Germ Heat can generate temperatures up to 450 degrees.

Germ Heat is the achievement of a long career in which Misawa has followed his muse. This has made him something of a maverick in Japan.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

His muse first

Upon graduation from university, Misawa joined Hitachi Ltd.'s research laboratory in Kokubunji, Tokyo  Kokubunji (国分寺市; -shi) is a city in Tokyo, Japan.

As of 2003, the city has an estimated population of 115,459 and the density of 10,057.40 persons per km². The total area is 11.48 km².

The city was founded on November 3, 1964.
, in 1964, the year of the Tokyo Olympics. He was assigned to the development of basic technologies for electric power plants. He was, however, interested in electronic calculators rather than power plants. He asked for a transfer and was refused. He said sayonara. Most young engineers would have stayed. It was an era of high economic growth and blue chips, like Hitachi, guaranteed employment for life except Misawa is an engineer who has been guided by his muse. Job security has been second.

Through a newspaper advert he landed a job in the Communications Department of Oki Electric Industry Co., Ltd. The job gave him the opportunity to learn about semiconductors and light electrical appliances. He was involved in design and production. He happily immersed im·merse  
tr.v. im·mersed, im·mers·ing, im·mers·es
1. To cover completely in a liquid; submerge.

2. To baptize by submerging in water.

3.
 himself in the splendid culture of making things.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

The muse knocked again. With the development of the microprocessor in the first half of the 1970s, computers busted bust·ed  
adj.
1. Slang
a. Smashed or broken: busted glass; a busted rib.

b. Out of order; inoperable: a busted vending machine.

2.
 out of the narrow world of university, government agency and other well-endowed institutions. It was an exciting time in computing and Misawa was introduced to the computer through his work with semiconductors. He then wanted to build one.

However, his department focused on production of special acoustic equipment and communication equipment. Around that time Misawa had made the acquaintance of a Matsushita Electric Industrial Co., Ltd. rep who often visited Oki Electric's Communication Department. The rep wanted to launch a company to build a computer and needed an engineer, was Misawa interested?

He asked his boss at Oki Electric whether he could work in semiconductors in the future. No, he was told, so, after 11 years with the company he left.

The erstwhile Matsushita rep, Misawa and another formed Tokyo Tokki Co., Ltd. to design and manufacture computers. They employed a staff of four. The company handled design, fabrication fabrication (fab´rikā´shn),
n the construction or making of a restoration.
, manufacture and sales, using subcontractors to turn out about 10 sets a year.

Misawa was a director of Tokyo Tokki for approximately four years. One of the computers they built, in the late 1970s, is still in use at a garbage disposal Noun 1. garbage disposal - a kitchen appliance for disposing of garbage
electric pig, disposal

kitchen appliance - a home appliance used in preparing food

garbage disposal, garbage disposal unit n
 facility. When its employees insert a punch card A storage medium made of thin cardboard stock that holds data as patterns of punched holes. Each of the 80 or 96 columns holds one character. The holes are punched by a keypunch machine or card punch peripheral and are fed into the computer by a card reader.  in the machine, a red destination board tells them the number of the truck and their job--driver, co-driver, or collector--that morning. The facility can't upgrade their computer system for lack of budget, laughs Misawa. Besides, collection teams are accustomed to the present system.

A friend of Misawa's was the son of the President of Asahi Tsushin Kogyo, whose principal client was Nippon Telegraph and Telephone Nippon Telegraph and Telephone Corporation (日本電信電話株式会社   (NTT NTT Nippon Telegraph and Telephone Corporation
NTT New Technology Telescope
NTT National Technology Transfer, Inc
NTT Name That Tune (TV game show)
NTT National Tree Trust
NTT Number Theoretic Transform
), a public corporation with a monopoly of the Japanese telecommunications market. The President confided to his son that the age of reliance on NTT was over (indeed, it would be privatized in 1985 to foster competition), and they must look beyond telecommunications. Misawa heard what the President was thinking from his friend, which in subsequent events, led onto him being asked to join Asahi Tsushin.

A major factor in this move was that his former company Tokyo Tokki's business had come from local governments, but municipalities began to outsource; there was little potential for growth. What's more Misawa, the engineer, had never been completely comfortable with his two fellow directors, whom he regarded as creatures of the business world. He wanted to pursue technical projects, so he nurtured an engineer to replace him. If you run into difficulties, I can pitch in and help, he told them. Having passed the baton, he entered Asahi Tsushin Kogyo. Misawa remained there for about two years and left to become director of Asahi Denshi Kogyo in January 1981. Today he is its President.

An Inimitable in·im·i·ta·ble  
adj.
Defying imitation; matchless.



[Middle English, from Latin inimit
 Invention

Misawa is quick to sing the praises of Germ Heat. He has already demonstrated its safety. Next he points out that because the molecular structure is a stability mechanism, the speed of the temperature rise is fast and the temperature is always constant. Then there is the wide applicability arising from Germ Heat's being in the form of a polymide tape. It varies in thickness, from 0.24 to 0.64mm, according to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 the desired temperature range. The film can be wound or folded, allowing for the manufacture of lightweight, compact products. It can be tailored to the intended use by giving consideration to such points as dimensions, voltage and desired temperature during design, also it can run on 3 to 400 volts DC or AC and be powered by a battery when used in a mobile mode.

He points to a Germ Heat floor heating device propped against the wall, beside it is a conventional floor heating device. "Our floor heating uses 20% less electricity," says Misawa. Other applications include a hot plate, space heater, bread oven, a laver roaster (a very Japanese product) and a panel heater, which is, the first Germ Heat consumer product Misawa is marketing in a big way from this Spring.

Misawa has filed a patent application for Germ Heat, but Japan's Patent Office is notoriously slow, he figures he will have to wait another year for approval. Meanwhile representatives from Japan's electronic giants have beaten a path to his Shitamachi office. He demonstrates Germ Heat's 'magical properties' for them. He always obliges requests for a morsel mor·sel  
n.
1. A small piece of food.

2. A tasty delicacy; a tidbit.

3. A small amount; a piece: a morsel of gossip.

4.
 of Germ Heat film as a souvenir, although he knows full well the samples will be deconstructed and analyzed by engineers at some of the most advanced R & D institutes in Japan. With a patent pending, but not in hand, their unlocking the secret of Germ Heat would seem cause for worry. Misawa, however, is unfazed un·fazed  
adj.
Not fazed or disturbed.
 and says "They have never figured out how Germ Heat works."

How could they? Germ Heat is the fruit of the experience and knowledge Hisashi Misawa has gained ever since his toy elevator rose three stories to first place in the competition in Hyogo Prefecture nearly 60 years ago.

While Germ Heat can produce controllable heat at half of the electric consumption of traditional heaters, Germ Heat products can cost as much as 20% more, although the added expenditure can be recouped in a year in smaller electric bills. The reason for the high cost is that Asahi Tsushin Kogyo does not derive the benefits of economies of scale from mass production. Misawa is eager to attract investors to fund a full-scale roll out of Germ Heat consumer products.

His following, his muse, should prove good for the environment and profitable for him and any partners. This maverick engineer can be reached at the address below.

President: Hisashi Misawa

Asahi Denshi Kogyo Co. Ltd

4-18-7 Taito, Taito-ku, Tokyo 110-0016

Tel: 03-3833-2231

Email: info@japaninc.com
COPYRIGHT 2007 Japan Inc. Communications
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
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Comment:Hisashi Misawa's "Germ Heat": heating everything at half the cost.
Author:Sabin, Burritt
Publication:Japan Inc.
Date:Mar 22, 2007
Words:2036
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