A tiny device that can recharge cell phone batteries in as
little as 30 seconds won 18-year-old Eesha Khare a major science award that
will help fund her college education at Harvard University.
Khare traveled from her California home to Phoenix last week
for the Intel International Science and Engineering Fair, where her invention
was honored as one of two winners of Young Scientist Awards.
"I'm in a daze. I can't believe this happened,"
Khare, a senior at Lynbrook High School in Saratoga, told CNN affiliate KPIX 5.
Khare's device, a black, rectangular type of supercapacitor
just over an inch long, can charge a cell phone battery in 20 to 30 seconds,
she said.
"I developed a new supercapacitor, which is basically
an energy storage device which can hold a lot of energy in a small amount of
volume," she told KPIX 5. The technology may also be able to speed up
charging of automobile batteries, she said.
A videotape of the award ceremony showed an ecstatic Khare
trotting up to the stage when her name was announced in Phoenix, then standing
with other winners as the audience at the fair applauded and confetti fell on
them.
The award includes a $50,000 prize that will come in handy
when Khare heads to Harvard in the fall, she told KPIX 5. With a laugh, she
predicted that "I will be setting the world on fire."
In announcing the winners of what it billed as the
"world's largest high school research competition," Intel cited Khare
for recognizing "the crucial need for energy-efficient storage
devices" as the world rapidly adopts portable electronics.
The other winner of a Young Scientist Award with Khare was
Henry Lin of Shreveport, Louisiana, who received a $50,000 prize for
"simulating thousands of clusters of galaxies" to allow scientists to
"better understand the mysteries of astrophysics: dark matter, dark energy
and the balance of heating and cooling in the universe's most massive
objects," the Intel statement said.
The top prize at the fair went to 19-year-old Ionut
Budisteanu of Romania, who used "artificial intelligence to create a
viable model for a low-cost, self-driving car," according to an Intel
statement. He received the Gordon E. Moore Award, named after the Intel
co-founder, which includes a $75,000 prize.
According to Intel, more than 1,500 young scientists from
around the world were chosen to compete in last week's fair.