What is the Future of Wireless Power?
mfbatzap writes "According to Firdooze, we have seen various devices that can free ourselves from wires at CES 2008. The manufactures, Wildcharge, Powercast and Fulton Innovation, came out with two different methods of transmitting power from source to the devices. Wildcharge and Fulton banked on magnetic coupling while Powercast decided to go with RF (Radio Frequency). So which technology will eventually prevail to be the future of wireless power? Or will the technological setbacks from transferring power wirelessly make it unrealistic to accomplish a wire-free world?"
For the types of application this is meant for, I think the old option would be a power cable. Unless you want to run your TV and computers from a few truck sized batteries. Seriously, when they brought out laptops did you say "JUST USE A DESKTOP!"? When they invented the telephone would you have said "JUST GO FOR A VISIT!". When people are walking into hospital do you should "JUST DIE ALREADY!"?
which is totally what she said
Shooting photons across a room to deliver significant power just ain't gonna be practical. If you use an omnidirectional antenna, the losses will be huge. If you instead have like a parabolic dish that tracks the receiver, the losses will be lower, but what happens to kitty or your eyeballs if they get in the way? Cooking your eyeballs to a nice firm egg-white consistency is not going to fly.
Magnetic fields are dipole fields, that means the little wavy lines leaving the North pole want to curl back as quicly as possible to the South pole. Which means they have very little extent in space. The strength drops off as the CUBE of the distance, so any significant distance is a no-go.
Off my limited knowledge, it would seem to be akin to one of the problems with biofuels...they currently take more energy to produce than they store.
If I remember my Second Law of Thermodynamics correctly, this is true in any case.
(Yes, I know what you meant.)