Good News! Electricity to go WIRELESS!

by abiather 7 Replies latest jw friends

  • abiather
    abiather

    The days of wires powering electronic devices could soon be at an end, with the development of a new system that will allow laptops, mobile phones and televisions to be left unplugged in the home while being recharged.

    The new technology exploits a recent breakthrough in physics, according to the US company WiTricity.
    It has shown that it can send electricity “wirelessly” through the air and can switch on a light bulb or keep a computer running.

    “Let’s face it: wires .,” Eric Giler, chief executive of WiTricity, said at the TEDGlobal conference in Oxford this week.
    “Batteries also ..” The new system has the potential to do away with mountains of disposable batteries and miles of wiring.
    “There is something like 40 billion disposable batteries built every year for power that, generally speaking, is used within a few inches or feet of where there is very inexpensive power,” Mr Giler said.

    The system is able to operate safely because the energy is largely transferred through magnetic fields.
    Mr Giler was keen to emphasise safety during the demonstration. “There's nothing going on — I’m OK,”
    he said as he walked around a television running on wireless power.

    The science behind the system was developed by the physicist Marin Soljacic at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
    After being woken on three consecutive nights by the “battery low” beep of his mobile phone, he wondered:
    “Why can’t all this electricity in the walls just come out and power my phone?”

    Professor Soljacic took advantage of the principle of resonance, whereby the transfer of energy becomes more efficient when a certain frequency is applied. When two objects have the same resonant frequency, they exchange energy without having an effect on surrounding objects. Acoustic resonance causes glasses to smash when a singer hits a specific note; WiTricity uses the resonance of low-frequency electromagnetic waves.

    The WiTricity system works by transferring energy between two magnetic coils. The first coil is placed in a box attached to a home’s electricity mains, and can be embedded in a wall or ceiling. The second coil is attached to a device such as a television or laptop. Electromagnetic waves are transferred between the two coils and the second coil absorbs energy.

    The Institute of Physics in London confirmed that the technology was safe, as it used a magnetic field that “had no detrimental effects on the human body”.

    There are drawbacks, though. Only smaller devices can be charged, and they must be within two metres of a wall that provides wireless power — although it is hoped that the range can be extended to as much as 30 metres.

    Wireless technology has been demonstrated before, including systems that use lasers. Researchers said that WiTricity’s technology was a breakthrough because the system did not require a clear line of sight between the charger and the device.

    Source: http://nicefun.net/electricity-wirelessly-through-the-air-vt29192.html#p54197

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wM8XkUeFcjc

  • WTWizard
    WTWizard

    I have an electric toothbrush that charges through induction. No actually plugging it in. You simply place the handle in the base, and it charges. It has to be within a few centimeters of the power source, though, in order to charge. I have also heard of other devices allowing you to charge things simply by placing them on a mat.

    This might work for short distances, say a couple of meters, without harming living things. However, if you are transmitting power for hundreds of kilometers, you are going to run into problems that are worse than wires. Health issues for power devices that are strong enough to transmit electricity wirelessly for hundreds of kilometers are unknown. Interference is also certain. You would get people stealing electricity with simple homemade devices, made out of aluminum foil, without paying anything. And much power would be wasted by being dissipated or sent into areas where it is not needed. Best of all, it would not solve rolling blackouts that are the result of too few power plants or localized high demand--just from grid issues.

    So, I suggest you not ditch your plans to get yourself a premium flashlight and plenty of batteries yet. You might, however, be able to charge them all at once with one device a meter or so away from your outlet.

  • adamah
    adamah

    Yeah, this is hardly new or a "breakthrough"? Wireless charging has been pretty common in the States for what, a decade or two?

    http://www.consumerreports.org/cro/news/2013/10/wireless-charging-pad-reviews/index.htm

    I suspect the "breakthrough" here is the idea of tuning the magnets (resonant frequency) deal that allows for greater efficiency.

    The problem with power transmission via induction is that by definition, it's very inefficent ('lossy'), and hence not suitable for power transmission for anything but small hand-held electronic devices in the home which don't have large power requirements while in use and/or infrequent duty cycles (a toothbrush is a good example: it's used once or twice a day for 4 minutes at a time).

    Inductive chargers aren't likely going to win any Energy Star energy-efficiency labels, so it's a step in the wrong direction as far as using up resources due to the 'gee whiz' factor and a desire to get rid of one cord (which you'll still need for use when away from home).

  • blondie
    blondie

    Tesla?

  • garyneal
    garyneal

    My thoughts exactly Blondie. This reminds me of the Tesla Tower project.

  • jgnat
  • TD
    TD

    Interesting.

    I remember a story about a farmer who's property was crossed by high voltage transmission lines. He built himself an induction coil large enough to power his whole house and put it just on his side of the easement.

    His reasoning was that since there was no physical connnection at all and the device was completely on his property, it was legal. He was eventually forced to dismantle it though when the power company proved that the inductive reactance of his device was measurable on their grid.

    This was at least 30 years ago.

  • Quarterback
    Quarterback

    Where will the Utility company install the meters?

Share this

Google+
Pinterest
Reddit