Tech

YouTuber Builds Beautifully Inefficient Nuclear Powered 'Tetris' Machine

Solar panels wrapped around tritium tubes generate just enough energy to power a simple 'Tetris' style handheld.
Boy
Image: YouTube screengrab

Nuclear power is one of the most efficient forms of electricity generation on Earthā€”most of the time. Lots of things are radioactive, and not all levels of radiation are useful for generating power. That didnā€™t stop YouTube tinkerer Ian Charnas from retrofitting a handheld gaming device with a nuclear powered battery that takes two months to charge and lets you game for about an hour, all to play a little Tetris.

Advertisement

As first spotted by Hackaday, Charnasā€™ handheld Tetris style machine uses tritium as its source of nuclear fuel. Tritium is a rare isotope of hydrogen thatā€™s gaseous and mildly radioactive. As he explains in a YouTube video walking viewers through his process, anyone can buy glass tubes of tritium that give off a pleasant radioactive glow in various colors. Charnasā€™ plan was to use tritium to create a solar cell that converted the light of the tritium into energy.

The design for the tritium battery isnā€™t new, and it's also not powerful. For the project, Charnas laid out a line of tritium vials and wrapped it in solar cells. That was the easy part.  The hard part was finding a battery that could hold the energy generated faster than it would dissipate. Charnas tracked down thin-film solid-state batteries that leak very slowly.

The problem is that the solid-state batteries are nightmares to work with, he explained in the video. Theyā€™re so small and finicky that itā€™s hard to get them lined up properly on a circuit board. Machines typically handle the precise measurements of aligning a solid-state battery, but Charnas had to do it by hand.

Originally, his goal was to use a tritium cell to power a Game Boy. At maximum power, his nuclear fuel cell was only generating 1.5 microwatts, though. ā€œIt turns out an actual Game Boy uses almost a million microwatts which is way too much,ā€ he said in his video. ā€œSo I bought a bunch of cheap knockoffs from the Dollar Store and found one that only uses about 1,000 microwatts.ā€

The handheld device Charnas used was a simple Tetris style machine running the game on a cheap LED screen with no backlight. Itā€™s the perfect system to test such a ludicrous nuclear powered battery, and Charnas charged the batteries for two months before flipping on the machine.

It ran for one hour. Itā€™s certainly not the most efficient Tetris style machine ever invented but itā€™s still a fascinating feat of engineering. Charnas is raffling off the nuclear powered Tetrix machine and donating the proceeds to a charity that helps children living near Chernobyl. Raffle tickets are only $1.