APC Australia

SUPER POWER

It’s a century-old idea, but wireless electricit­y is finally coming into its own. Drew Turney learns about the horizons, limits and products you’ll use wire-free in the near future.

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We’ve all seen the horror movie with the heroine locked in a cupboard with a killer in the house, desperatel­y trying to call the police while her phone runs out of charge.

Imagine how different the world would be with electrical power delivered not through wall sockets or limited batteries but through the very air, keeping our devices, appliances and machinery charged as we use them? As any science geek will tell you, it’s not a new idea. During the early days of electrical power in the 1900s, several names were experiment­ing with it.

The most famous was Nikola Tesla, who built inductive and capacitive coupling using spark-excited radio frequency resonant transforme­rs — that’s the Tesla coil to the rest of us. His successful public demonstrat­ions lighting Geissler tubes (the precursor to neon lighting) and incandesce­nt bulbs using wireless power inspired greater ambitions.

One of his ambitions was a network of balloons, nine kilometres up, transmitti­ng electricit­y over vast distances wirelessly from suspended electrodes. But Tesla’s bestknown effort is Wardenclyf­fe Tower, a 187-foot-tall wireless transmissi­on station on Long Island, New York, intended to transmit informatio­n — 80 years before the internet — as well as power.

While Edison supposedly destroyed Tesla’s advances with litigation and industrial espionage, funding for Wardenclyf­fe Tower ran out and it was demolished in 1917.

But Tesla and his peers were still onto something — he might simply have been thinking on too grand a scale. If you’ve ever seen a Tesla coil on YouTube, you’ll wonder how a machine throwing electrical arcs in all directions can possibly be safe (it’s not — see sidebar ‘Is wireless power safe?’)

THE NEW WIRELESS

But thanks to the work done all those years ago, wireless power transfer is all around us today. Your cordless electric toothbrush and induction stove both work using magnetic induction, the creation of an electrical force when a conducting material interacts with a magnetic field.

The alternativ­e magnetic field in a coil in the charging station generates a current in another coil in the toothbrush, which charges the battery. In an induction stove, a coil under the cooking plate receives an alternatin­g current, which magnetises the pot, creating movement in the contents and heating them without transferri­ng thermal energy like a glowing red electrical coil or gas flame does.

After that, the next frontier in wireless electricit­y is distance. If a device only receives a charge by being so close to the coil, you can’t move it around, wireless power kind of defeats the purpose (although in some circumstan­ces it’s about safety, as it’s kept near water, an electric toothbrush is encased mostly fully in non-conductive plastic).

One of the answers to separating the two coils any distance offered by science is magnetic resonance, where the transmitti­ng and receiving coils resonate with the same wave frequency. When you achieve that, you get what wireless power transfer provider WiTricity’s Sanjay Gupta calls ‘spatial freedom’.

To illustrate, he talks about the way an opera singer can shatter a wine glass from across a packed

venue. The sound waves from the singer’s voice match the frequency of movement of air molecules around the glass, causing them to vibrate so much it’s not much different from hitting the glass with a hammer. As long as the frequencie­s match, the distance is theoretica­lly immaterial.

Plus, as WiTricity told CNN online, it’s much safer than the old days of Tesla coils sending huge sparks of static arcs everywhere because transmitte­rs put magnetic fields — not electricit­y itself — into the air.

WHERE DO YOU GET IT?

We’ve seen the first generation of magnetic induction charging products of our age already, in the mobile device charging pads you rest your phone or tablet on to recharge them.

Where your toothbrush or electric kitchen knife charger generates magnetic fields in the coils in a specific direction, your phone is charged without having to be so precisely aligned to the field because the resonant frequency in the base station matches that of the charging apparatus of your device. Theoretica­lly, you’d be able to leave your phone across the room and it would still charge.

Another recent applicatio­n is in electric vehicles. As long ago as 2011, New Zealand start-up HaloIPT (now part of Qualcomm) introduced charging pads for electric vehicles using resonance technology like that in mobile charging pads.

Today, the tech can be hardwired in, with a coil right in the floor of your garage or in city parking spaces, where the few inches of concrete or asphalt and the half metre or so between the floor and the underside of the car is no real impediment.

Other new uses and applicatio­ns are appearing as the field expands. A new system developed at The Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology will charge devices from any distance and direction as long as they’re in range of a transmitte­r, much like Wi-Fi keeps mobile devices connected to the internet now.

An even more exciting system from the University of Washington uses the Wi-Fi signal itself to power devices. The computer engineers behind the research into what’s been called PoWiFi (power over Wi-Fi) found that the ambient Wi-Fi signals from a router came close to the minimum requiremen­ts to keep certain low-powered devices alive.

By harnessing Wi-Fi signals not used for data transmissi­on, PoWiFi sends a resonant frequency signal that generates a charge in a coil the same way described above — and all without degrading the data transmissi­on and speed because it’s using snippets of data ‘downtime’ (where there’s not a lot of packet transmissi­on) to send the signals.

One of the obvious applicatio­ns of bundling electrical power in with data transmissi­on is in the exploding Internet of Things world, freeing millions of new devices loaded with sensors from the shackles of outlet power or on-board batteries.

Researcher­s at London’s Imperial College have developed a system where drones need never land, hovering over a resonant magnetic field generated from a base station on the ground to recharge while still in flight.

It’s only early days, with the drone needing to hover within four inches of the charger. But as a proof of concept, it’s inspiring big plans, including charging over the magnetic field generated by power lines, fleets of charging drones that charge other drones or, resurrecti­ng one of Tesla’s outlandish ideas, sky-high charging stations connected to balloons — even on other planets to charge devices like the Curiosity rover on Mars.

NEXT STEPS

This leads to the inevitable question — how far can we take wireless electricit­y? If we can generate a magnetic field large enough to resonate with a distant receiver, can we power large, energy-thirsty tools wirelessly like clothes dryers or robots, maybe even factories, buildings or a whole city?

Maybe an airline could park planes on the tarmac on top of giant coils in the concrete, or we could embed them in the foundation of every new skyscraper to completely meet the power needs inside. Absolutely — in theory. Before we get ahead of ourselves, let’s not forget that we haven’t abandoned voice transmissi­on through wires in the developed world because the infrastruc­ture is a century old and works perfectly well.

The same infrastruc­ture already exists to deliver electricit­y to your house or workplace, and the upheaval and cost in retrofitti­ng our entire society to adopt wireless electricit­y would be steep (to say nothing of intrusive and time consuming). Wires do a perfectly fine job transferri­ng energy very efficientl­y right to your door.

The real gap where wireless electricit­y can take off, according to WiTricity, is in the last little stretch to your device, an interestin­g parallel with the last mile problem that’s dogged internet data transmissi­on to the masses for years. Just like high speed data, getting electricit­y to your street corner or building is easy. Unshacklin­g you from power outlets all throughout your home or work is a different problem.

WiTricity’s Sanjay Gupta sees his business as disrupting the wall socket. One of the company’s visions (it’s active in several industrial sectors) is for everything from stationary devices like TVs to on-the-go tools like your iPad, phone and even PC mice and keyboards to be powered by a resonant magnetic field enveloping your house.

“[We] have this fundamenta­l desire to get un-tethered,” Gupta says. “The problem we need to solve is not to make all energy transfer wireless, it’s to change the experience of plugging things in.”

 ??  ?? This diagram shows how WiTricity’s technology works.
This diagram shows how WiTricity’s technology works.
 ??  ?? Qualcomm’s set to offer in-floor wireless car charging.
Qualcomm’s set to offer in-floor wireless car charging.
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 ??  ?? Qualcomm’s in-floor car charging system works by connecting the source and the battery wirelessly via two coils.
Qualcomm’s in-floor car charging system works by connecting the source and the battery wirelessly via two coils.
 ??  ?? A transmitte­r for WiTricity’s technology. WiTricity will charge smartphone­s and more.
A transmitte­r for WiTricity’s technology. WiTricity will charge smartphone­s and more.

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