Imagine if you could harvest enough juice to run a low power AP...

Tuesday, June 09, 2009
Wireless Power Harvesting for Cell Phones

Nokia hopes to create a device that could harvest enough power to keep a
cell phone topped up.

A cell phone that never needs recharging might sound too good to be
true, but Nokia says it's developing technology that could draw enough
power from ambient radio waves to keep a cell-phone handset topped up.

Ambient electromagnetic radiation--emitted from Wi-Fi transmitters,
cell-phone antennas, TV masts, and other sources--could be converted
into enough electrical current to keep a battery topped up, says Markku
Rouvala, a researcher from the Nokia Research Centre, in Cambridge, U.K.

Rouvala says that his group is working towards a prototype that could
harvest up to 50 milliwatts of power--enough to slowly recharge a phone
that is switched off. He says current prototypes can harvest 3 to 5
milliwatts.

The Nokia device will work on the same principles as a crystal radio set
or radio frequency identification (RFID) tag: by converting
electromagnetic waves into an electrical signal. This requires two
passive circuits. "Even if you are only getting microwatts, you can
still harvest energy, provided your circuit is not using more power than
it's receiving," Rouvala says.

To increase the amount of power that can be harvested and the range at
which it works, Nokia is focusing on harvesting many different
frequencies. "It needs a wideband receiver," says Rouvala, to capture
signals from between 500 megahertz and 10 gigahertz--a range that
encompasses many different radio communication signals.

Historically, energy-harvesting technologies have only been found in
niche markets, powering wireless sensors and RFID tags in particular. If
Nokia's claims stand up, then it could push energy harvesting into
mainstream consumer devices.

Earlier this year, Joshua Smith at Intel and Alanson Sample at the
University of Washington, in Seattle, developed a
temperature-and-humidity sensor that draws its power from the signal
emitted by a 1.0-megawatt TV antenna 4.1 kilometers away. This only
involved generating 60 microwatts, however.

Smith says that 50 milliwatts could require around 1,000 strong signals
and that an antenna capable of picking up such a wide range of
frequencies would cause efficiency losses along the way.

"To get 50 milliwatts seems like a lot," adds Harry Ostaffe, head of
marketing for Pittsburgh-based company Powercast, which sells a system
for recharging sensors from about 15 meters away with a dedicated radio
signal.

Steve Beeby, an engineer and physicist at the University of Southampton,
U.K., who has researched harvesting vibrational energy, adds, "If they
can get 50 milliwatts out of ambient RF, that would put me out of
business." He says that the potential could be huge because MP3 players
typically use only about 100 milliwatts of power and spend most of their
time in lower-power mode.

Nokia is being cagey with the details of the project, but Rouvala is
confident about its future: "I would say it is possible to put this into
a product within three to four years." Ultimately, though, he says that
Nokia plans to use the technology in conjunction with other
energy-harvesting approaches, such as solar cells embedded into the
outer casing of the handset.


http://mobile.technologyreview.com/communications/22764




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