Slashdot Mirror


Wireless Electricity Set to Power Village

freedommatters writes "The UK Sunday Times has a story today about how "Scientists have successfully applied the technology used in microwave ovens to beam electricity without the need for unsightly pylons and overhead cables." A prototype has illuminated a handful of light bulbs and they expect to be able to power a remote village within three years."

8 of 373 comments (clear)

  1. Read that carefully. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

    He "believes that it is likely." That doesn't mean he had any empirical evidence whatsoever.

    Repeated controlled studies have shown that there is no connection between power lines and cancers except in the sense that neighborhoods near power lines tend to be of poorer people who have a higher incidence of cancer due to lifestyles (i.e., they smoke a lot).

    1. Re:Read that carefully. by kavau · · Score: 3, Informative
      We are talking about microwave radiation here, not about power lines! The radiation emitted from power lines is in the 50-Hz range, while microwaves are in the GHz (1E9 Hz) range. Naturally, the higher the frequency, the more damage the radiation can do (this is elementary quantum mechanics: the energy of a photon is given by planck's constant times the frequency). Comparing microwaves to power lines therefore does not make sense at all.

      I recall reading, a while back, an article about a "microwave cannon" planned by the military. Supposedly it's effect is to raise the temperature of the enemy soldiers' brain tissue by a few degrees, which renders them unconcious. I could imagine that the energy needed to power a light bulb could have a similar effect on your brain, albeit weaker. But it might still make you feel uncoordinated and "feverish".

      On the other hand, I'd love to have a microwave power supply for my laptop :-)

  2. More details on this site by 2sleep2type · · Score: 4, Informative

    This is a more detailed publication pdf file

  3. Mirror of Story by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    Electricity can be beamed through the air without a pylon in sight
    Roger Dobson

    SCIENTISTS have successfully applied the technology used in microwave ovens to beam electricity without the need for unsightly pylons and overhead cables.
    The power is fired through the air in the form of microwaves and collected in special antennas that reconvert the microwaves into electricity.

    A prototype of the wireless power technology has shown the system works and a full-scale version is now being built to make a remote village on the French-governed island of Réunion in the Indian Ocean the world's first microwave-powered community.

    According to a report to be published this week, the system is a cheaper way than either solar energy or local generators of supplying remote areas not connected to a grid.

    "(Electricity) network distribution is effective at the centre but the costs increase quickly when you get to the edge," said Dr Guy Pignolet of CNES, the French space agency, which has conducted the trials.

    "Extending it to remote areas is very costly, but with microwave technology you do not have those costs. You also do not have pylons, which you may not want in sensitive areas."

    The technology works by converting direct current (DC) electricity into microwave power at the transmitting end in the same way that switching on a microwave oven converts electricity into waves using a device called a magnetron. Residents are unlikely to be baked as the frequencies in the two applications are entirely different.

    Microwaves for the electricity are targeted via antennas and reflectors at a "rectenna" (from the words rectifier and antenna), which absorbs the microwave energy from the beam and converts it back into DC power with diodes.

    In Grand-Bassin on Réunion, which lies at the bottom of a 3,000ft canyon with no road access, electricity is currently provided by solar panels placed on the roofs of the houses. But increasing the amount of electricity solely by using the panels is difficult because of the amount of surface area needed. It is also expensive.

    The researchers have successfully produced a field prototype to illuminate a handful of light bulbs. A second prototype is being finalised and will be in operation in about 10 months, while the whole project to supply the village with power is scheduled to be completed within three years.

    Additional reporting: Nick Speed

    1. Re:Mirror of Story by GigsVT · · Score: 3, Informative

      They've probably demonstrated this from within the near field of the transmitter, something that isn't difficult.

      I have a feeling we won't hear any more about this "technology" (which is 50 years old). It's probably a borderline scam artist fishing for VC money.

      --
      I've had enough abrasive sigs. Kittens are cute and fuzzy.
  4. Documentation, as requested by nurb432 · · Score: 3, Informative

    "The life and times of Nikola Tesla" ISBN 1-55972-329-7

    Read that, it has all the information you need, and documented sources.

    I have also seen examples of his coils in real life creating the effect of 'wireless power transfer'. Its simple high frequency air-core transformer theory really.. its not complex in our age.. it was totally amazing in his..

    Figures you would post under anonymous, cant hide behind facts.

    --
    ---- Booth was a patriot ----
  5. For those who didn't read the article... by Hanzie · · Score: 3, Informative

    login with slashdot/slashdot

    Then post.

    This isn't a case of general broadcast, it's point to point.

    They also claim that, since it's different frequencies, that they "won't bake the residents." Though I'm not sure about it, I'd think anybody who actually is in the middle of such a project and says such a thing probably know's what they're talking about. (Though obviously spectacular exceptions exist.)

    In any case, if they start baking residents, passersby or wildlife, I assume lawsuits will fly. I also assume that somebody has consulted tech-aware lawyers already regarding this issue.

    --
    ********* sig: If you don't like the law, get filthy stinking rich, and buy a better one.
  6. No solid scientific evidence by spineboy · · Score: 5, Informative

    That old power line thing was disputed a while ago - mostly just a media fad. I was working at the NIH with one of the guys who first noticed the magnetic field effect on celles in culture.
    It has never been shown to cause any cancers.
    Radiat Res 2000 May;153(5 Pt 2):627-36 Related Articles,
    Leukemia and lymphoma incidence in rodents exposed to low-frequency magnetic fields.
    Boorman GA, Rafferty CN, Ward JM, Sills RC.

    The PCB coolants used in/around many of those power stations is another subject.

    Just to help hammer the nail home, there are many FDA approved devices that use magnetic or pulsed elctronic field devices to aid in bone healing. No reports of cancer yet in these either. Some increased cell growth yes, but cancer no.

    This kinda crap science is usually perpetuated by the media and lawyers hoping to make a few bucks (well, usually they want a few million).
    Bah!

    --
    ..........FULL STOP.