[vid]Witricity

🚫
Exiled
Joined
May 24, 2006
Messages
590
Reaction score
0
YouTube - Witricity
Is 'WiTricity' about to become the next new thing? It seems that a Massachusetts Institute of Technology team was able to light up a 60-watt bulb that had 'no physical connection' with the power-generating appliance. MIT physics professor Marin Soljacic believes his system needs to become twice as efficient to be on par with charging the chemical batteries in portable gadgets.


Massachusetts Institute of Technology researchers made a 60-watt light bulb glow by sending it energy wirelessly -- from a device 7 feet away -- potentially heralding a future in which cell phones and other gadgets get juice without having to be plugged in. The breakthrough, disclosed Thursday in Science Express, the online publication of the journal Science, is being called "WiTricity" by the scientists.

The concept of sending power wirelessly isn't new, but its wide-scale use has been dismissed as inefficient because electromagnetic energy generated by the charging device would radiate in all directions.

One advance was announced last fall, when MIT physics professor Marin Soljacic said he had figured out how to use specially tuned waves. The key is to get the recharging device and the gadget that needs power to resonate at the same frequency - allowing them to more efficiently exchange power.

It's similar to how an opera star can break a wine glass that happens to resonate at the same frequency as her voice.

Bye Bye Batteries

The next step was to demonstrate the principle in experiments, which is what was described in the new paper in Science. The MIT team was able to light up a 60-watt bulb that had "no physical connection" with the power-generating appliance.

"It was quite exciting," Soljacic said. The process is "very reproducible," he added. "We can just go to the lab and do it whenever we want."

The development raises the prospect that we might eliminate some of the clutter of cables in our ever-more electronic world. And if devices can get their power through the air, they might not need batteries and their attendant toxic chemicals.

On Second Thought

However, the technology has a ways to go before it becomes practical.

The MIT system is about 40 to 45 percent efficient -- meaning that most of the energy from the charging device doesn't make it to the light bulb. Soljacic believes his system needs to get twice as efficient to be on par with charging the chemical batteries in portable gadgets.

Also, the copper coils that transmit the power are about 2 feet wide for now -- too big to be feasible for, say, laptops. And the 7-foot range of this wireless Relevant Products/Services handoff could be increased -- presumably so that one charging device could automatically power all the gadgets in a room.

Soljacic believes all those improvements are within reach. The next step is to fire up more than just light bulbs, perhaps a Roomba robotic vacuum or a laptop.

Soljacic's team stresses that the "magnetic coupling" process involved in WiTricity is safe on humans and other living things. And in the initial experiments on the light bulb, no harm came to the cell phones, electronic equipment and credit cards in the room - though more research on that is needed.

txt
 
any side effect to human? no FCC approval =p hahaha (
ca_ale_16 - [vid]Witricity - RaGEZONE Forums
)
 
Back