Recharging your laptop computer, your cell
phone and a variety of other gadgets may one day
be as convenient as surfing the
web--wirelessly.
Marin Soljacic, an assistant professor in
MIT's Department of Physics and Research
Laboratory of Electronics, will describe his and
his MIT colleagues' research on that wireless
future on Tuesday, Nov. 14 at the American
Institute of Physics Industrial Physics Forum in
San Francisco.
Like many of us, Soljacic (pronounced
Soul-ya-CHEECH) often forgets to recharge his
cell phone, and when it is about to die it emits
an unpleasant noise. "Needless to say, this
always happens in the middle of the night," he
said. "So, one night, at 3 a.m., it occurred to
me: Wouldn't it be great if this thing charged
itself?" He began to wonder if any of the
physics principles he knew of could turn into
new ways of transmitting energy.
After all, scientists and engineers have
known for nearly two centuries that transferring
electric power does not require wires to be in
physical contact. Electric motors and power
transformers contain coils that transmit energy
to each other by the phenomenon of
electromagnetic induction. A current running in
an emitting coil induces another current in a
receiving coil; the two coils are in close
proximity, but they do not touch.
Later, scientists discovered electromagnetic
radiation in the form of radio waves, and they
showed that another form of it--light--is how we
get energy from the sun. But transferring energy
from one point to another through ordinary
electromagnetic radiation is typically very
inefficient: The waves tend to spread in all
directions, so most of the energy is lost to the
environment.
Soljacic realized that the close-range
induction taking place inside a transformer--or
something similar to it--could potentially
transfer energy over longer distances, say, from
one end of a room to the other. Instead of
irradiating the environment with electromagnetic
waves, a power transmitter would fill the space
around it with a "non-radiative" electromagnetic
field. Energy would only be picked up by gadgets
specially designed to "resonate" with the field.
Most of the energy not picked up by a receiver
would be reabsorbed by the emitter.
In his talk, Soljacic will explain the
physics of non-radiative energy transfer and the
possible design of wireless-power systems.
While rooted in well-known laws of physics,
non-radiative energy transfer is a novel
application no one seems to have pursued before.
"It certainly was not clear or obvious to us in
the beginning how well it could actually work,
given the constraints of available materials,
extraneous environmental objects, and so on. It
was even less clear to us which designs would
work best," Soljacic said. He and his colleagues
tackled the problem through theoretical
calculations and computer simulations.
With the resulting designs, non-radiative
wireless power would have limited range, and the
range would be shorter for smaller-size
receivers. But the team calculates that an
object the size of a laptop could be recharged
within a few meters of the power source. Placing
one source in each room could provide coverage
throughout your home.
Soljacic is looking forward to a future when
laptops and cell phones might never need any
wires at all. Wireless, he said, could also
power other household gadgets that are now
becoming more common. "At home, I have one of
those robotic vacuum cleaners that cleans your
floors automatically," he said. "It does a
fantastic job but, after it cleans one or two
rooms, the battery dies." In addition to
consumer electronics, wireless energy could find
industrial applications powering, for example,
freely roaming robots within a factory
pavilion.
Soljacic's colleagues in the work are
Aristeidis Karalis, a graduate student in the
Department of Electrical Engineering and
Computer Science, and John Joannopoulos, the
Francis Wright Davis Professor of Physics. Both
are also affiliated with the Research Laboratory
of Electronics. The work is funded in part by
the Materials Research Science and Engineering
Center program of the National Science
Foundation.
| Source: |
Massachusetts
Institute Of
Technology | |
Published on 19th
November 2006