----- Forwarded message from "Hughes, James J." <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> -----

From: "Hughes, James J." <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: Thu, 7 Jun 2007 16:26:49 -0400
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [tt] Tesla vindicated: wireless power

http://www.newscientisttech.com/article.ns?id=dn12014

Wireless power could have cellphone users beaming

    * 19:00 07 June 2007
    * NewScientist.com news service
    * Robert Adler

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Your cellphone or laptop computer may soon recharge itself the same way it 
transfers information - wirelessly.

Researchers at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), in the US, 
report that they can now send substantial amounts of power - enough to light a 
60-watt bulb - across a room by magnetic induction between two devices tuned to 
resonate with each other.

They hope to use this phenomenon of "strong coupling" to recharge or even run 
mobile devices wirelessly.

Induction - the ability of a changing magnetic field to produce an electric 
current - was discovered by Michael Faraday in 1831. It is what makes electric 
generators, transformers, and motors work. Until now, induction has only been 
practical at close range, for example between the charger and handset of an 
electric toothbrush. At longer distances, the power losses are too great to 
make it worthwhile
Power-storing coil

Inspired by a mobile phone with a rundown battery, Marin Soljaĉić (pronounced 
soul-ya-cheech), a theoretical physicist at MIT, wondered if he could improve 
the efficiency of induction over longer distances.

>From his experience with lasers, he knew that objects that resonate at the 
>same frequency readily exchange energy. He set out to see if he could use 
>electromagnetic resonance to transmit electrical power.

Soljaĉić and his research group have now built a coil with just the right 
properties. Powered by mains current, the coil naturally oscillates at 10 MHz. 
Unlike an antenna - which radiates the energy it receives - their device stores 
energy internally, in the form of oscillating currents and charges.

The coil generates a strong electromagnetic field, but most of the electric 
component of that field is trapped inside the coil, while an oscillating 
magnetic field surrounds it. The oscillating magnetic field efficiently 
transmits power across the lab to a receiver tuned to the same frequency.

Minimising the external electric field is crucial for safety. "We wanted to use 
the magnetic field for coupling, and have the electric field confined," says 
theoretician André Kurs, a member of the MIT group, "because a magnetic field 
does not interact with most objects, including biological tissues."
Real world applications

"I think it’s brilliant," says Douglas Stone, a theoretical physicist at Yale 
University, not affiliated with the MIT group. "This is something anybody could 
have thought about for a century."

Strong agrees with the MIT researchers that while there is much work to be done 
before your gadgets recharge themselves wirelessly, this technology will move 
from the lab to the real world. "There’s no fundamental problem," says Strong. 
"It’s going to work."

Journal reference: Science Express (7 June 2007, p 1)
Related Articles

    * 'Evanescent coupling' could power gadgets wirelessly
    * http://www.newscientisttechnology.com/article/dn10575
    * 15 November 2006
    * One charging pad could power up all gadgets
    * http://www.newscientisttechnology.com/article/dn6891
    * 21 January 2005
    * Nano-generator could power tiny devices
    * http://www.newscientisttechnology.com/article/dn11553
    * 05 April 2007

Weblinks

    * Marin Soljaĉić, MIT
    * http://www.mit.edu/%7Esoljacic/
    * Soljacic’s comments on wireless power transfer
    * http://www.mit.edu/~soljacic/wireless_power.html
    * A. Douglas Stone’s research group, Yale University
    * http://www.eng.yale.edu/stonegroup/index.html
    * Science Express
    * http://www.sciencemag.org/sciencexpress/recent.dtl
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