15-Year-Old Boy Builds Smart Microwave
15-Year-Old Boy Builds Smart Microwave That Spares the Salad
A desire to help his father make a perfect cup of hot tea
inspired this Oregon teenage tinkerer to use his advanced math and
computer programming skills to transform a conventional microwave oven
into an automated smart kitchen appliance.
Most evenings, Shahir Rahman watched as his father struggled to heat
up his tea in the microwave, a ritual that often resulted in a mess. The
tea would inevitably bubble and spill over, and his dad would burn his
fingers handling the hot teacup.The now 15-year-old Shahir knew there had to be a better way and was inspired to solve these warming woes. So he set out to build a smarter microwave, one that would consistently heat any solid and liquid (tea included) to ideal temperatures.
Shahir reasoned the smart microwave had to be intelligent enough to know what it was cooking and cheap enough to be replicated. This balance would make it appealing to others who struggled to warm their favorite foods and beverages.
If you look at current-day heating applications, theres different kinds for comfort, for warming the house, for cooking but the cooking part hasnt become smart, said Shahir.
This was something that I wanted to change. I wanted to improve cooking, prevent burns and create better food, he explained.
Shahir is the son of two veteran engineers at Intel, Asifur Rahman and Rawshan Jahan. The straight-A high school student has been coming up with innovative, problem-solving science fair ideas for years and is charting a path to attend a STEM-focused college in California so he can follow in his parents career footsteps.
Father and son already share a few interests. They spend hours together tinkering on electronics and building drones inside their cluttered at-home workshop.
It was there that Asifur flew and crashed one of their Lego drones into a table, sparking a small fire. When the in-house fire alarm failed to sound, Shahir thought about heat and how it was measured. That led him to his current tech project.
My goal is to eventually create a device that could warm up food without any user input, he said.
Shahir also knew that if the smart microwave required 5 bajilion sensors to calculate everything, then it would be too expensive to build and more difficult to replicate. That would be a recipe for failure.
Nothing held Shahir back.
The Experiment Begins
First, the father and son duo studied how heat works in a conventional microwave. To do this, they cannibalized a $15 model they purchased at the local Goodwill.
We researched it a little bit and found out that the microwave radio energy is very targeted, Asifur Rahman said. He explained that the turntable helps to heat food evenly because some areas inside the microwave get hotter than others.
The two scientists sprinkled shredded cheese on a plate and microwaved it without the turntable to reveal the microwaves high, low and no heat points.
We discovered that if we used that property of the targeted heat, then we could build a microwave that skips the salad while heating the mashed potatoes correctly, explained Asifur.
Shahir fitted an infrared sensor on the top panel inside the microwave to record the exact cooking temperatures. This data allowed him to create heat maps showing heat inside the microwave rises and distributes over time.
Using the map data, Shahir needed to understand how the heat would impact the solids and liquids he put in the microwave.
Different foods, he discovered, have different heat maps and temperature profiles. To achieve targeted pixel-based heating (TPBH), the sensor would need to know how to react to a wide variety of temperature profiles.
Using TPBH, the microwave automatically heats each plate (or not) according to the food items specific characteristics instead of based on user input. Shahir wanted his smart microwave to identify foods in order to calculate the ideal target temperature and time required to heat it.
I had to find out what the optimum temperature was for different kinds of foods, said Shahir. For example, he determined that the average person prefers coffee to be 74 degrees Celsius.
By looking at the viscosity, I was able to determine mathematically what temperature the food needed to reach so that it was lip-ready and the person could eat right away, Shahir said.
He used this information to build temperature profiles for everything from his favorite noodle soup to frozen salmon filets. Then there was the advanced math.
The Engineering Begins
Using an Excel spreadsheet, Shahir worked on a mathematical algorithm that would take the food temperature data, calculate the viscosity, compile, rotate and smooth the data before calculating the target temperature.
He quickly found Excel wasnt up to the task of advanced computing.
My real journey began when I started learning Python, Shahir said of his adventure into the complex world of programming languages. In addition to learning Python, the young Rahman needed to learn to compute complex math concepts like derivatives and gradients to ensure the appliance was smart enough to identify and heat anything he put inside.
He had a break in the project, however, when he stumbled on an online Python library filled with different preprogrammed mathematical modules.
From there, I was able to modify them and create an algorithm of my own that I used for my food property determination, Shahir explained.
Eventually he got the Python program to do exactly what the Excel version did: simulate viscosity graphs and calculate viscosity using a bilinear algorithm. This program would help the smart microwave identify food and calculate how hot and how long it would need to be warmed in order to reach its lip-ready temperature.
Shahir is a brilliant young man, said James Russell, director, platform engineering for the Internet of Things Group. He had been doing so much theory, math and analysis on paper, but lacked the practical applications and mentors. Thats where we came in.
He is like a kid in a candy store, said Russell, describing the 15 year old.
The reason Shahir is successful is that he doesnt know what he doesnt know, so he just tries everything, Russell said. Thats so refreshing. Its incredible to see a young man accomplish so much with a positive attitude and passion.
Building the Beast
With engineering support and the algorithm and program in place, Shahir bought an infrared Panasonic thermopile array sensor a low-cost, low-resolution sensor that could detect the foods temperature without touching it.
Shahir used the sensors data to run his algorithm, which calculated viscosity, but not other variables like the amount of food, density and other characteristics.
Whats really difficult about this is that if you look at standard algebra equations, to solve for two variables x and y you need to have two equations, but what I was dealing with was much more complicated, Shahir explained. I only had one variable, temperature, and I had to solve for multiple variables.
Using the Intel Edison, I can take data directly from the sensor and use the modules Wi-Fi capabilities as a cloud computing device to calculate the variables required to run the microwave.
While the programming is complete, the microwaves radiation interferes with some of the electronic circuits. Shahir is currently working to fix the sensor so that it will work underneath the radiation.
This hardware-related task is the last barrier to the final product, but hes confident it will be done within the next three months.
Hes even exploring how to alter the technology to solve related problems, like detecting fires before they begin.
As with all his experiments, Shahir ultimately wants to make a positive impact.
Most of my projects are about ordinary ideas for ordinary people, but they have a great impact in the solution, he said.
It all starts with an idea.
15-Year-Old Boy Builds Smart Microwave
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