Daily Mail

Solar-powered mobile that doesn’t need a battery

- By Colin Fernandez Science Correspond­ent

SCIENTISTS have designed a mobile phone that requires no batteries.

The device uses a fraction of the amount of power used by a regular handset.

Made from off-the-shelf components, it can power itself in two ways – either from a solar panel the size of a grain of rice, or from radio waves.

The new technology is detailed in a paper published in the Proceeding­s of the Associatio­n for Computing Machinery on Interactiv­e, Mobile, Wearable and Ubiquitous Technologi­es.

Professor Shyam Gollakota, of Washington University’s computer science faculty said: ‘We’ve built what we believe is the first functionin­g cellphone that consumes almost zero power. To achieve the really, really low power consumptio­n that you need to run a phone by harvesting energy from the environmen­t, we had to fundamenta­lly rethink the design.’

The team bypassed the most power-hungry element of a mobile phone – which is converting the ‘analogue’ sound of the human voice into digital data that can be transmitte­d. Co-author Professor Joshua Smith said: ‘The cellphone is the device we depend on most today. So if there were one device you’d want to be able to use without batteries, it is the cellphone.

‘The proof of concept we’ve developed is exciting today, and we think it could impact everyday devices in the future.’

The team say that the technology was made to work with a custom made base station.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom