Skip to main content

This New Cellphone Uses Such Little Power It Doesn't Need a Battery

Imagine being out and about, only to realize that your phone's battery life is running dangerously low and there's nowhere nearby to charge it. Now imagine how liberating it could feel to not have to worry about that. A new cellphone prototype could one day provide such relief because it doesn't need a battery at all, according to a new study.
The phone, a voice call-only device, is by no means the sexiest cell on the block — the calls crackle and the phone only works within a stone's throw of a computer that serves as a sort of cell tower. But how does the device work without a battery?
The cellphone requires such little power — only a few microwatts rather than the 100 microwatts a smartphone uses for voice calls —  that the power it does need can be collected from the environment, according to the researchers. A tiny photodiode, smaller than an adult's pinky nail, collects ambient light while a radio frequency harvester makes it possible to use energy sent out wirelessly from a homemade cell tower, called a base station.

The newly developed battery-free cellphone can send and receive calls using only a few microwatts of power.
Imagine being out and about, only to realize that your phone's battery life is running dangerously low and there's nowhere nearby to charge it. Now imagine how liberating it could feel to not have to worry about that. A new cellphone prototype could one day provide such relief because it doesn't need a battery at all, according to a new study.
The phone, a voice call-only device, is by no means the sexiest cell on the block — the calls crackle and the phone only works within a stone's throw of a computer that serves as a sort of cell tower. But how does the device work without a battery?
The cellphone requires such little power — only a few microwatts rather than the 100 microwatts a smartphone uses for voice calls —  that the power it does need can be collected from the environment, according to the researchers. A tiny photodiode, smaller than an adult's pinky nail, collects ambient light while a radio frequency harvester makes it possible to use energy sent out wirelessly from a homemade cell tower, called a base station. [Top 10 Disruptive Technologies]
To make even such a simple-sounding phone — one that doesn't draw on a battery — required the phone's developers, a team of researchers from the University of Washington, to overcome a hurdle inherent in other battery-free devices.
The trick others have used to enable devices to work without a battery is to alternate periods of activity with periods of energy collection. That is, the devices would switch off periodically, which, while practical enough for a camera or a temperature sensor, would be maddening for a phone.
To keep their phone working continuously, the researchers chose perhaps a counterintuitive approach: to go analog. The battery-free cellphone incorporates a technology called analog backscatter, a way to absorb or reflect a signal that requires less power than generating a signal, in the same way using a mirror to reflect the light from a flashlight takes less power than generating the light in the first place.
"By doing the signals in an analog way, we actually got the power consumption so low that you never have to turn off your phone," Vamsi Talla, one of the phone's designers and a computer science and engineering research associate at the University of Washington, told Live Science. The power-heavy work of converting analog signals into digital ones is then outsourced to the in-lab base station.
"It's the first type of their system in the world that demonstrates that you are actually able to make a phone call with just a microwatt power consumption," Pengyu Zhang, a postdoctoral researcher in electrical engineering at Stanford University who was not involved in the study, told Live Science. "That's amazing."
Zhang does see one major obstacle in the way of battery-free phones becoming commonplace, though.
"If you look at a real cellphone base station, it involves two links: uplink from the cellphone to the base station and downlink from the base station to the cellphone," he said. "You have to enable the communication in both directions. However, if you implement the communication — the downlink, where the base station talks to the cellphone — the power consumption of the cellphone is actually very, very high. And I’m not sure how can you enable such capabilities with this design."
Talla acknowledged there's still a long way to go, particularly when it comes to integrating the technology into cell towers, but he said he's hopeful 5G networks — the next level of telecommunications standards — might help make commercial battery-free cellphones a reality. He imagines that someday people might own both a battery-powered smartphone and a battery-free phone.
"Let's say your phone is low on battery or the battery has died, then you can use this phone, at least, to make an emergency 911 phone call," Talla told Live Science. "That could be a lifesaver in a lot of scenarios."

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

The Best Android 8.1 Tv Box to buy

Buying an Android TV box can be baffling. Chances are you've ended up here because you either know what an Android TV box is and want some buying advice – or you've been advised by others that an Android TV box is the solution to your streaming problems but you have no idea what that means. If it’s the latter, I have some bad news: no-one really knows what an Android TV box is. There’s no generally-accepted definition of what constitutes one of these streaming boxes, and many don’t even run Android TV. Confused? You should be: the Android TV box market is a confusing place. However, with our guide, you can safely navigate your way to the right Android TV box for you. Deal alert: Get X96Max Smart TV BOX Android 8.1  with 37% off. The following are the product details: Brand Name:VONTAR  OTA Update:Yes  Memory:4G DDR3  Wireless:Yes  Video Output:HDMI 2.0  System Upgrade:Yes  Model Number:X96 MAX  Bluetooth:Yes  Ethernet:1000M...

Understanding Winthrills Network

Winthrills Network is an online crowdfunding platform, which gives three part earning opportunities. I will be reviewing the ways and methodology of earning with winthrills network in Nigeria. A Brief Infomation about Winthrills Network The name WIN means Web Income Nigeria ; it is a segmented platform for Mandee Thrills Company. It’s a Network Advertising platform that delivers both amazing results for its advertisers and a highly profitable revenue stream for its promoters. The company started providing online earning for its users since 2010. WINThrills centralizes the advertisers who wish to promote products or services online and the promoters who are eager to generate revenue. WINThrills Network is also an international online crowdfunding platform that connects private investors with businesses. A team of WINThrills Network professionals provides investors decision-making tools which connect investors and reliable businesses. With the rapidly growing...

Google’s Pixel 2 will come in new ‘kinda blue’ color

On the heels of a number of other Google leaks that Droid Life published this afternoon, we now have a clear look at the forthcoming Pixel 2 . The follow-up to last year’s Google Pixel (the smaller of the two Google phones), which is being announced on October 4th, will come in three colors: kinda blue, just black, and clearly white. Droid Life says to expect roughly the same kind of pricing structure as last year’s Pixel. That means a 64GB option for $649, and a 128GB option for $749 — $200 less than the reported Pixel 2 XL pricing. Like last year’s Pixels, the Pixel 2 will be made by HTC (which Google is reportedly considering buying ). The Pixel 2 XL, however, is reportedly being manufactured by LG. Exactly how big a difference that will spell between these two phones is hard to say from the leaks alone, but it does now seem apparent they’ll be similar in design with small cosmetic disparities. ...