GETTING JUICED UP OVER WIRELESS POWER
Imagine almost never having to plug in your phone or computer to ensure that they’ve got ample power to last all day and beyond. What if such powerthirsty devices could get charged automatically, the moment you walk into a room with them?
It’s a dream scenario, but is it a pipe dream?
What generally passes for wireless charging nowadays is something of a misnomer. You lay down a phone such as Samsung’s flagship Galaxy S8 onto a “wireless” charging pad, mat or cradle that is itself tethered to some nearby socket. It’s convenient, sure, but not exactly liberating.
“We believe from a consumer perspective there’s very little utility there,” says Stephen Rizzone, CEO of San Jose-based Energous. “If you have to drop your mobile device … onto a charging surface, then it’s really no longer mobile.”
Hatem Zeine, chairman, chief scientist and founder of Ossia in Bellevue, Wash., concurs: “The way we look at this is that wireless power should be like Wi-Fi. You go into your home, your phone will charge in your pocket, you don’t need to place it somewhere or orient it somewhere or even know where the power transmitter is. It should just work.”
Another company, uBeam out of Santa Monica, Calif., is developing a solution that transmits targeted power through inaudible high frequency ultrasonic technology.
“We are literally on the bleeding edge of science in what we’re doing here,” says uBeam CEO Meredith Perry, who broke her recent silence to talk to USA TODAY. “In Silicon Valley-years, it has taken an insanely long amount of time.”
These companies are chasing “uncoupled” power solutions, a technology that could amount to one of the next major innovations for smartphones whose technological upgrades have stagnated lately.
Some of the efforts are still confined to labs. Scientists at Disney Research in Pittsburgh gained attention earlier this year for a prototypical 16x16-foot room they built in which the walls, ceiling and floors were all constructed of aluminum panels. Inside was a copper pole with capacitors able to transfer power to almost any location in the room. Researchers charged phones, toys and lamps. But Disney has no immediate commercial plans.
The broad promise is that wireless power schemes will supply juice not just to the phones and computers you carry, but to hearing aids and other wearables, sensors inside connected devices around the home and in businesses, even electric vehicles. No cables, wires or charging pads needed. So what’s the holdup? While the technology has shown itself to work to some degree, it’s hard to do over distances.
It’s very early: The potential solutions in development are incompatible with one another, in various stages of progress and aimed at different corners of the consumer and in- dustrial market.
“When we developed the wireless charging standard, the things that were most important were safety, efficiency and, to some extent, cost. As soon as you start to transmit power over large distances, all of this becomes more difficult,” maintains Menno Treffers, chairman of the Wireless Power Consortium, which developed the Qi (pronounced “chee”) inductive standard, one of two main “tightly coupled” wireless charging standards in use today.
Challenges abound: Solutions must be practical, affordable and able to charge multiple devices simultaneously and within reasonable range of a transmitter.
Transmitters, especially those in the home, can’t be eyesores, and indeed the vision in some cases is to build the tech into furniture or walls.
Ideally, charging will take place even when there’s no direct line of sight between transmitter and receiver, so you could be able to charge the phone in your pocket. That’s one of the limiting factors, for example, in uBeam’s approach.
Suffice it to say, the tech must not only be safe but cannot interfere with other products. In the U.S., the Federal Communications Commission must give its blessing.
Interim steps for phones would come in the form of covers, sleeves, dongles and cases with embedded wireless power solutions.
“But if you’re going to get mass adoption, you’re going to have to find a consumer electronics manufacturer, an Apple, a Samsung, that is willing to put a transmitter into their devices,” says Rob Reuckert, managing director of Sorenson Capital in Lehi, Utah.