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Studeo
15th June 2010, 19:28
Source: The Economist
http://www.economist.com/node/16295708


Power from thin air
Wireless technology: It is already possible to send electricity without wires. Can devices be powered using ambient radiation from existing broadcasts?
Jun 10th 2010
ANYONE whose mobile phone has ever run out of juice—which means, these days, more than half the world’s population—will like the idea of getting electrical power out of the air. The notion is far from new. A little over a century ago, the inventor Nikola Tesla drew up ambitious plans to transmit electrical power without wires. He carried out a series of experiments in which electric lights were illuminated via electrostatic induction, by connecting them to metal sheets suspended in a strong electric field produced by a distant transmitter. In 1898 he proposed a “world system” of giant towers that would form both a global wireless communications network and a means of delivering electricity over large areas without wires.
The construction of the first such tower, the Wardenclyffe Tower, on Long Island, began in 1901. Tesla’s backers included the financier J.P. Morgan, who invested $150,000. But before the tower was completed, Morgan and the other backers pulled out. They worried that the delivery of electricity through the air could not be metered, and there would be nothing to stop people from helping themselves.
But has Tesla had the last laugh after all? Today several firms—including Fulton Innovation, eCoupled, WiTricity and Powercast—are pursuing various technologies that deliver electrical power without wires (though over shorter distances than Tesla had in mind). WiTricity has demonstrated the ability to send enough energy across a room to run a flat-screen television using its approach, called “resonant magnetic coupling”. This is different from Tesla’s approach, but the firm’s founders have acknowledged his pioneering work.
In the long run, however, it may be Morgan who is vindicated, as researchers find ways to pull power out of the air without paying for it—a technique known as “energy scavenging” or “energy harvesting”. It is already possible to power small electronic devices, such as wireless sensors installed in buildings and industrial machinery, using a dedicated microwave transmitter nearby. The sensors pick up the microwaves with an antenna and convert the signal into electrical energy. But as power requirements drop and energy-scavenging technology improves, it will become increasingly practical to power these and other devices using just “ambient” energy—the sea of existing radio waves produced by television, radio and mobile-phone transmitters.
It sounds too good to be true. “There is something magical about it,” says Joshua Smith, a principal engineer at Intel’s research centre in Seattle. But the science is sound, he says. Last year Dr Smith and Alanson Sample, a researcher at the University of Washington in Seattle, powered a small humidity and temperature sensor using nothing more than the energy gleaned from a television station 4.1km (2.5 miles) away. With their receiver tuned specifically to pick up signals from this one megawatt transmitter, they were able to generate 60 microwatts of power. It does not sound like much, but it was enough to power the device and demonstrate the principle. In recent weeks Dr Smith and Dr Sample, working with Scott Southwood, another researcher at the University of Washington, have built a weather sensor that measures temperature and light levels and sends a packet of data every five seconds by radio. It is entirely powered by ambient energy.
Ambient radio waves have largely been ignored as a potential power source until recently, because the power of a broadcast radio signal rapidly decreases with distance. That is not to say that radio waves cannot pack a punch from a distance. Advocates of “satellite solar power”, for example, dream of beaming gigawatts of solar power down to Earth from geostationary satellites more than 35,000km up. The same approach has been used in ground-based experiments to beam one kilowatt of power over a distance of several kilometres, notes Peter Fisher, a physicist at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. But ambient radiation is much weaker.
One way to address this problem is to harvest radiation from multiple sources. Last year Nokia, the world’s largest handset-maker, raised eyebrows with research showing that this approach could scavenge nearly 100 times as much energy as Dr Smith’s approach. Markku Rouvala, an engineer at Nokia Research Centre in Cambridge, England, harvested as much as 5 milliwatts of power using a “wide band” receiver capable of mopping up radio signals between 500MHz and 10GHz—including radio, TV, Wi-Fi and mobile-phone signals—from nearby transmitters. It takes at least 20 milliwatts to keep a mobile phone operating in standby mode, but Nokia hopes that power scavenging might eventually deliver 50 milliwatts, enough to trickle-charge a phone.
At the Consumer Electronics Show in January, RCA showed off a gadget designed to harvest energy from nearby Wi-Fi transmitters, which can then be used to recharge a mobile phone. RCA says it plans to launch the device, dubbed Airnergy, later this year.
The first devices to be powered entirely by ambient energy are likely to be sensors, calculators and clocks. But the hope is that music-players, e-readers and mobile phones will eventually follow, says Dr Smith. There are other means of harvesting ambient energy, from vibrations, movement or heat. But the attraction of radio waves is that they are pretty much everywhere. It’s like recycling energy, says Dr Fisher. “It’s energy that’s around, and is not doing anything else,” he says.

Etherios
15th June 2010, 19:38
...

In 1898 he proposed a “world system” of giant towers that would form both a global wireless communications network and a means of delivering electricity over large areas without wires.

...

112 Years later i think the minds of this world would had found far far better power solutions. Then again who says they havent? Just because we are no supposed to be Ready!!!! for them? We never left Dark Age ... its just changed name to Brainwashed Age...

frank samuel
15th June 2010, 20:04
This is great news, thanks. I love to experiment and this gets the creative juices flowing.
Thank you Studeo keep it coming.:thumb:

many many blessings to you and yours...:wub:

illuminate
16th June 2010, 01:07
It’s like recycling energy, says Dr Fisher. “It’s energy that’s around, and is not doing anything else,”

Exactly... we can harvest energy from air, water, magnets, the sun... our universe is literally filled with FREE energy.
The times of paying a price for it are over :becky:

Aniusia
20th August 2010, 11:48
The Green Beautiful - Movie - Banned in EU


Did you ever wonder why the floor under your feet, in the place where you live are covered with a gray material and you can’t see the soil? Why you use pieces of paper entitling you to any value, without which you won’t have nothing, not even food?[...]

......If you haven’t wondered on all this, its because you’re like an ant, small cell in the super-organisma and can’t see beyond your cell’s vision.


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C5CmMm_SRpM

THIS IS WHAT OUR LIFES SHOULD LOOK LIKE

Everyone interested in pure life, love and our planet should read ANASTASIA:
http://www.ringingcedarsofrussia.org...lish/index.php

:wub:
Anna

Butangeld
7th September 2010, 21:30
There may be a shift occurring in the general view of what is a valid source of energy. It is encouraging to hear of projects by big firms to find alternative sources of energy, but the story rarely changes. It is always characterized as very difficult and way out expensive to develop. Of course, energy permeates everything existing right now, if only ways could be found to extract it cheaply (or if you run the power supply gig on this planet, then expensive is the key), we could stop relying on the crude tech' developed by our great, great grandfathers/mothers and start enjoying it rather than wondering when it will all run out.

Found something just now that is a way of generating power that could just slip into the mainstream:
http://www.naturalnews.com/029674_fuel_cells_urine.html
We could combine all of our utility bills into one low payment. We provide the fuel.

Strat
9th September 2010, 21:51
I think there is a bit of a miscommunication here. It's not so much pulling power out of the air, so much as it is transmitting power through the air. If you trace the power source to it's beginning, it will still end at a power plant.

It is really cool though, and I hope research continues. Speakers without wires would be awesome.

treeman
8th February 2011, 10:56
If anyone hears about up and coming energy conferences, could they kindly mention on this forum or possibly
a new thread...unless there already is and I'm not aware of...many thanks.
I loved Brian O'Leary talk at Zürich Camelot conference...and how we should visualize/ imagine an alternative
power source.
I always imagined someone inventing a dehumidifier that would do the opposite and extract electrons rather than
moisture(a crude example), but imagine not water but electricity. It may need moisture to extract electrons
Does anybody know how Lou Brits and John Christie from LUTEC and their work on 'lutec 1000' and how it's progressing ?
'I heard another two years'...