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posted by Fnord666 on Wednesday August 05 2020, @03:33AM   Printer-friendly
from the shut-up-and-take-my-money dept.

The Problem with Microwaving Tea:

Typically, when a liquid is being warmed, the heating source — a stove, for example — heats the container from below. By a process called convection, as the liquid toward the bottom of the container warms up, it becomes less dense and moves to the top, allowing a cooler section of the liquid to contact the source. This ultimately results in a uniform temperature throughout the glass.

Inside a microwave, however, the electric field acting as the heating source exists everywhere. Because the entire glass itself is also warming up, the convection process does not occur, and the liquid at the top of the container ends up being much hotter than the liquid at the bottom.

A team of researchers from the University of Electronic Science & Technology of China studied this nonuniform heating behavior and presents a solution to this common problem in the journal AIP Advances, from AIP Publishing.

By designing a silver plating to go along the rim of a glass, the group was able to shield the effects of the microwave at the surface of the liquid. The silver acts as a guide for the waves, reducing the electric field at the top and effectively blocking the heating. This creates a convection process similar to traditional approaches, resulting in a more uniform temperature.

Placing silver in the microwave may seem like a dangerous idea, but similar metal structures with finely tuned geometry to avoid ignition have already been safely used for microwave steam pots and rice cookers.

Journal Reference:
Peiyang Zhao, Weiwei Gan, Chuanqi Feng, et al. Multiphysics analysis for unusual heat convection in microwave heating liquid [open], AIP Advances (DOI: 10.1063/5.0013295)


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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday August 05 2020, @01:10PM (1 child)

    by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday August 05 2020, @01:10PM (#1031685)

    This. In the summer a kettle boiling when the AC is on Is wasting electricity- switch to ice tea.

  • (Score: 2) by hendrikboom on Wednesday August 05 2020, @10:59PM

    by hendrikboom (1125) Subscriber Badge on Wednesday August 05 2020, @10:59PM (#1032001) Homepage Journal

    I once visited Boulder, Colorado and by mistake put a new teabag in a glass of ice water. After a while the water turned brownish. It was exceptionally weak as tea, but I had to conclude that America has invented cold-water tea bags.

    At home I put tea leaves in my two-litre the teapot, and pour in boiling water from an electric kettle. The wait a while.

    The kettle has an automatic shutoff that doesn't trigger until the water is actually boiling. Without that I'm likely to cause damage by forgetting I'm making tea.

    That makes tea I can drink all day long by microwaving it cup by cup.

    -- hendrik