The Hamilton Spectator

No batteries, wires or plugs needed

Student team makes plastic devices that communicat­e via Wi-Fi

- CATHERINE LONG SEATTLE — The Seattle Times

You don’t have to ask Alexa, or even push a button. With new devices pioneered by a University of Washington computer science team, battery-less objects made entirely of plastic could communicat­e with other devices on your home network.

For example, a laundry detergent bottle could monitor your detergent use for you — and order more when you’re running low.

And you could print or design similar objects yourself, using a standard 3-D printer.

The new concept is the latest idea to come out of the Allen School’s Networks and Mobile Systems Lab at the university — a team of graduate students and faculty looking for low-power (or nopower) ways to enhance communicat­ion with those household objects that are commonly known as the internet of things.

The same team also has created a battery-free cellphone that uses almost no power and never needs to be charged. And they created a “singing poster” that could broadcast a song to somebody standing nearby by piggybacki­ng onto FM radio waves.

The lab is throwing its newest concept out to the wider world, hoping an army of tinkerers and do-it-yourselfer­s, or “makers,” will fire up their 3-D printers and their imaginatio­ns, and figure out cool things to do with the technology.

With the plans available online, “it really empowers people to make things that are custommade for their needs,” said Shyam Gollakota, associate professor in the Paul G. Allen School of Computer Science & Engineerin­g. He directs the Networks and Mobile Systems Lab, which employs six doctoral students.

The 3-D printed objects use plastic gears, springs and switches to create mechanical movement, like an old-fashioned windup watch. That movement allows the devices to communicat­e via Wi-Fi, taking advantage of the router in your house or office that’s constantly broadcasti­ng a radio signal.

As the gears and springs move within the plastic device — because you’ve pushed a button, or poured a liquid that causes the gears to spin — they cause a conductive metal switch to intermitte­ntly connect and disconnect to the device’s metal antenna, said UW electrical engineerin­g graduate student Vikram Iyer.

The antenna’s signal is reflected by the radio waves broadcast by your Wi-Fi router. When the switch is toggled on and off, the antenna either reflects or absorbs radio waves broadcast by your router.

Computer science grad student Justin Chan gives this analogy: Your home Wi-Fi router is constantly blasting out radio waves in the same way that a really bright flashlight blasts out light. The 3-D plastic objects these students have created are like mirrors that reflect or deflect that bright light, using the antenna to send a message to a receiver — a smartphone — that could be decoded by software.

To prove how this might work, the UW students made a couple of simple devices that use gears to measure movement. There’s a device that snaps onto the top of a bottle of liquid laundry detergent, for example, with gears that move as the detergent is poured out of the bottle. (Everything is printed with a 3-D printer — even the antenna and switch, which are made using a plastic-and-copper filament that’s readily available on the 3-D printer market.)

The device can measure how much has been poured out so far, which could help you know when it’s time to order more — or it could even order more detergent for you automatica­lly.

The team also has created switches and sliders that could be used to control the volume of a stereo, or turn on a light, without using battery power that remotecont­rol devices all require.

 ?? GREG GILBERT, SEATTLE TIMES ?? Justin Chan, left, and Vikram Iyer show plastic devices they 3D printed that have no batteries, but can communicat­e over a WiFi network.
GREG GILBERT, SEATTLE TIMES Justin Chan, left, and Vikram Iyer show plastic devices they 3D printed that have no batteries, but can communicat­e over a WiFi network.

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