Georgia Tech engineers pull energy out of atmospheric hat, go on electromagnetic scavenger hunt

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Mankind’s about to plunge into the depths of a wireless sensor-powering ether binge — braincell annihilating vapors not included. Spearheaded by Georgia Institute of Technology’s professor Manos Tentzeris and his engineering team, this ambient energy scavenging tech harnesses electromagnetic frequencies in the 100MHz – 15GHz range — anything from your FM car radio to radar — and converts it into a useable DC power source. So, it’s free energy — kind of . The cheap, self-powering paper or flexible polymer-based sensors are created using standard inkjet printers and Tentzeris’ “unique in-house recipe” of circuit-building silver nanoparticles . Current testing hasn’t yet yielded significant enough wattage to power your PS3 Slim, but it could soon via the help of supercapacitors and future solar cell integration. Imagine clothing embedded with health-monitoring biometric sensors, airport security run by something other than aloof TSA agents, or even spoilage-aware drink cartons — milk that tells you when it’s gone sour. The invisible radio band-charged possibilities are endless, but with storage still in the microwatt to one milliwatt range, it’s more concept than solid vaporware reality. Continue reading Georgia Tech engineers pull energy out of atmospheric hat, go on electromagnetic scavenger hunt Georgia Tech engineers pull energy out of atmospheric hat, go on electromagnetic scavenger hunt originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 11 Jul 2011 19:30:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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