• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer
  • Skip to navigation
Close Ad

The Spoon

Daily news and analysis about the food tech revolution

  • Home
  • Podcasts
  • Events
  • Newsletter
  • Connect
    • Custom Events
    • Slack
    • RSS
    • Send us a Tip
  • Advertise
  • Consulting
  • About
The Spoon
  • Home
  • Podcasts
  • Newsletter
  • Events
  • Advertise
  • About

Chill

January 7, 2020

Matrix Industries Shows Off the Juno, a ‘Microwave for Cooling’, at CES 2020

Tell me if this sounds familiar: You go into the fridge to get a refreshing cold can of your favorite beverage and, surprise surprise, someone forgot to restock the fridge.

Maybe it’s you. Maybe it’s your roommate. Whoever it is, you’re now the sad sack stuck drinking room temperature beer or wine from a can (and you do drink wine from a can, ok?) wishing someone just had a little more beverage planning foresight.

But what if you could toss that can or bottle into a ‘microwave for cooling’ and almost instantly have an ice-cold beverage?

That’s the utopia that Matrix Industries has in mind with their new Juno Chiller. The product is based on a technology called thermoelectric cooling, which longtime Spoon readers know is based on a principle called the Peltier Effect, which essentially pushes phonons from one place to another through electrical excitement and in turn can remove heat from, say, a refrigerator chamber or a can of pop .

It’s complicated to say the least and I’m not a particle physicist, but what I can do is shoot iPhone video at CES press events that shows you the technology in action:

View this post on Instagram

In this noisy show floor video, you can hear how the Juno Chiller uses the Peltier effect to cool a can of soda. #ces2020

A post shared by The Spoon (@thespoontech) on Jan 7, 2020 at 6:23am PST

Matrix is not the only company looking to apply thermoelectric cooling technology to new applications. Phononic has been talking up their solid state cooling technology for some time, but over the past few years have largely focused on displacing compressor-based refrigerators in commercial refrigeration environments.

Spoon readers may also recall others have talked about a “microwave for cooling” before. Frigondas, a startup based in Spain, pitched the idea of an actual microwave that would both heat and flash-freeze. It’s an intriguing idea if they can pull it off, but the company’s largely gone quiet ever since pitching in it 2017 and 2018.

Matrix, on the other hand, seems to be just getting started with their product and plan on releasing their home beverage cooler later this year. If you want to get in on the cold drink action, they’ve launched an Indiegogo for the Juno Chiller, which would allow you get the beverage cooling appliance for half off ($199) in August if everything goes according plan.

As you can see by the product hero reel below, the final consumer edition will look much different than the working prototype shown above, featuring a much taller chamber that will allow you to chill everything from a can of beer to a bottle of wine.

JUNO - Rapidly chill wine, beer, coffee and more in just minutes!

May 7, 2019

The GoSun “Chill” Portable Fridge is Hot, Blowing Past Indiegogo Goal on its First Day

Summer is almost here (finally!). Time to literally dust off the old plastic cooler stowed away in your garage and fill it with ice and beverages for the balmy days ahead. Better yet, toss that cooler out completely, skip the bags of ice entirely and get the GoSun Chill, which uses a battery pack to create what is essentially a portable mini-fridge.

This is what at least 130 people decided as they collectively plunked down $80,000 dollars on Indiegogo for their own Chills. That means it took less than a day for GoSun to blow past its $12,000 goal for the campaign, which still has 31 days left.

GoSun is famous for its outdoor ovens that cook using the power of the sun, literally. Reflective mirrors and vacuum insulation capture heat from the sun even on a mountaintop to cook meals without electricity (though the company does offer a hybrid solar/electric model).

As The Spoon’s Mike Wolf found out at CES this year, GoSun is cooling things off with the Chill. It uses a battery pack to power brushless DC compressor motors that turn the Chill into a cooler that requires no ice (though it can make ice, if need be) and will keep your beers cool all day off a full charge.

The Powerbank delivering all that juice to the Chill can also be used to charge your phone when you’re out at the park or on the boat, and even has a light. Additionally, GoSun is offering solar panels so you can keep charging the Powerbank throughout the day.

Backers can pick up a GoSun Chill for $479, which is a lot of money to keep your Keystones cold. Plus, they won’t ship until August, which means you’ll only get a month of use out of it before this Summer’s done.

And as we feel compelled to say with every crowdfunded hardware project – caveat emptor. There are plenty of hardware companies that never fulfilled actual products to the people who backed them. Though GoSun has a track record of actually bringing products to market, so perhaps that’s one thing I can Chill about.

GoSun Debuts The 'Solar Kitchen', Including a Solar Powered Mini-Fridge

Primary Sidebar

Footer

  • About
  • Sponsor the Spoon
  • The Spoon Events
  • Spoon Plus

© 2016–2025 The Spoon. All rights reserved.

  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • LinkedIn
  • RSS
  • Twitter
  • YouTube
 

Loading Comments...