Goodbye wiresé
Photo /
Aristeidis Karalis
Wireless power
transfer over two-meter distance, from the coil on
the left to the coil on the right, where it powers a
60W light bulb. Members of the team that performed
the experiment are obstructing the direct line of
sight between the coils; front row: Peter Fisher (left)
and Robert Moffatt; second row: Marin Soljacic;
third row: Andre Kurs (left), John Joannopoulos and
Aristeidis Karalis.
|
MIT team experimentally demonstrates wireless
power transfer, potentially useful for powering laptops, cell phones
without cords
Franklin Hadley, Institute for
Soldier Nanotechnologies
June 7, 2007
Imagine a future in which wireless power transfer
is feasible: cell phones, household robots, mp3 players, laptop
computers and other portable electronics capable of charging
themselves without ever being plugged in, freeing us from that
final, ubiquitous power wire. Some of these devices might not even
need their bulky batteries to operate.
A team from MIT's Department of Physics,
Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, and
Institute for Soldier Nanotechnologies (ISN) has experimentally
demonstrated an important step toward accomplishing this vision of
the future.
The team members are Andre Kurs, Aristeidis
Karalis, Robert Moffatt, Prof. Peter Fisher, and Prof. John
Joannopoulos (Francis Wright Davis Chair and director of ISN), led
by Prof. Marin Soljacic.
Realizing their recent theoretical prediction,
they were able to light a 60W light bulb from a power source seven
feet (more than two meters) away; there was no physical connection
between the source and the appliance. The MIT team refers to its
concept as "WiTricity" (as in wireless electricity). The work will
be reported in the June 7 issue of Science Express, the advance
online publication of the journal Science.
Late-night beeps
The story starts one late night a few years ago,
with Soljacic (pronounced Soul-ya-cheech) standing in his pajamas,
staring at his cell phone on the kitchen counter. "It was probably
the sixth time that month that I was awakened by my cell phone
beeping to let me know that I had forgotten to charge it. It
occurred to me that it would be so great if the thing took care of
its own charging." To make this possible, one would have to have a
way to transmit power wirelessly, so Soljacic started thinking about
which physical phenomena could help make this wish a reality.
Radiation methods
Various methods of transmitting power wirelessly
have been known for centuries. Perhaps the best known example is
electromagnetic radiation, such as radio waves. While such radiation
is excellent for wireless transmission of information, it is not
feasible to use it for power transmission. Since radiation spreads
in all directions, a vast majority of power would end up being
wasted into free space.
One can envision using directed electromagnetic
radiation, such as lasers, but this is not very practical and can
even be dangerous. It requires an uninterrupted line of sight
between the source and the device, as well as a sophisticated
tracking mechanism when the device is mobile.
The key: Magnetically coupled resonance
In contrast, WiTricity is based on using coupled
resonant objects. Two resonant objects of the same resonant
frequency tend to exchange energy efficiently, while interacting
weakly with extraneous off-resonant objects. A child on a swing is a
good example of this. A swing is a type of mechanical resonance, so
only when the child pumps her legs at the natural frequency of the
swing is she able to impart substantial energy.
Another example involves acoustic resonances:
Imagine a room with 100 identical wine glasses, each filled with
wine up to a different level, so they all have different resonant
frequencies. If an opera singer sings a sufficiently loud single
note inside the room, a glass of the corresponding frequency might
accumulate sufficient energy to even explode, while not influencing
the other glasses. In any system of coupled resonators there often
exists a so-called "strongly coupled" regime of operation. If one
ensures to operate in that regime in a given system, the energy
transfer can be very efficient.
While these considerations are universal, applying
to all kinds of resonances (e.g., acoustic, mechanical,
electromagnetic, etc.), the MIT team focused on one particular type:
magnetically coupled resonators. The team explored a system of two
electromagnetic resonators coupled mostly through their magnetic
fields; they were able to identify the strongly coupled regime in
this system, even when the distance between them was several times
larger than the sizes of the resonant objects. This way, efficient
power transfer was enabled.
Magnetic coupling is particularly suitable for
everyday applications because most common materials interact only
very weakly with magnetic fields, so interactions with extraneous
environmental objects are suppressed even further. "The fact that
magnetic fields interact so weakly with biological organisms is also
important for safety considerations," Kurs, a graduate student in
physics, points out.
The investigated design consists of two copper
coils, each a self-resonant system. One of the coils, attached to
the power source, is the sending unit. Instead of irradiating the
environment with electromagnetic waves, it fills the space around it
with a non-radiative magnetic field oscillating at MHz frequencies.
The non-radiative field mediates the power exchange with the other
coil (the receiving unit), which is specially designed to resonate
with the field. The resonant nature of the process ensures the
strong interaction between the sending unit and the receiving unit,
while the interaction with the rest of the environment is weak.
Moffatt, an MIT undergraduate in physics,
explains: "The crucial advantage of using the non-radiative field
lies in the fact that most of the power not picked up by the
receiving coil remains bound to the vicinity of the sending unit,
instead of being radiated into the environment and lost." With such
a design, power transfer has a limited range, and the range would be
shorter for smaller-size receivers.
Still, for laptop-sized coils, power levels more
than sufficient to run a laptop can be transferred over room-sized
distances nearly omni-directionally and efficiently, irrespective of
the geometry of the surrounding space, even when environmental
objects completely obstruct the line-of-sight between the two coils.
Fisher points out: "As long as the laptop is in a room equipped with
a source of such wireless power, it would charge automatically,
without having to be plugged in. In fact, it would not even need a
battery to operate inside of such a room." In the long run, this
could reduce our society's dependence on batteries, which are
currently heavy and expensive.
At first glance, such a power transfer is
reminiscent of relatively commonplace magnetic induction, such as is
used in power transformers, which contain coils that transmit power
to each other over very short distances. An electric current running
in a sending coil induces another current in a receiving coil. The
two coils are very close, but they do not touch. However, this
behavior changes dramatically when the distance between the coils is
increased. As Karalis, a graduate student in electrical engineering
and computer science, points out, "Here is where the magic of the
resonant coupling comes about. The usual non-resonant magnetic
induction would be almost 1 million times less efficient in this
particular system."
Old physics, new demand
WiTricity is rooted in such well-known laws of
physics that it makes one wonder why no one thought of it before.
"In the past, there was no great demand for such a system, so people
did not have a strong motivation to look into it," points out
Joannopoulos, adding, "Over the past several years, portable
electronic devices, such as laptops, cell phones, iPods and even
household robots have become widespread, all of which require
batteries that need to be recharged often."
As for what the future holds, Soljacic adds,
"Once, when my son was about three years old, we visited his
grandparents' house. They had a 20-year-old phone and my son picked
up the handset, asking, 'Dad, why is this phone attached with a cord
to the wall?' That is the mindset of a child growing up in a
wireless world. My best response was, 'It is strange and awkward,
isn't it? Hopefully, we will be getting rid of some more wires, and
also batteries, soon.'"
This work was funded by the Army Research Office
(Institute for Soldier Nanotechnologies), National Science
Foundation (Center for Materials Science and Engineering), and the
Department of Energy.