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Student Invention May Significantly Extend Mobile Device Battery Life

imamac writes with this excerpt from news out of Carleton University: "Atif Shamim, an electronics PhD student at Carleton University, has built a prototype that extends the battery life of portable gadgets such as the iPhone and BlackBerry, by getting rid of all the wires used to connect the electronic circuits with the antenna. ... The invention involves a packaging technique to connect the antenna with the circuits via a wireless connection between a micro-antenna embedded within the circuits on the chip. 'This has not been tried before — that the circuits are connected to the antenna wirelessly. They've been connected through wires and a bunch of other components. That's where the power gets lost,' Mr. Shamim said." The story's headline claims the breakthrough can extend battery life by up to 12 times, but that seems to be a misinterpretation of Shamim's claim that his method reduces the power required to operate the antenna by a factor of about 12; 3.3 mW down from 38 mW. The research paper (PDF) is available at the Microwave Journal. imamac adds, "Unlike many of the breakthroughs we read about here and elsewhere, this seems like it has a very high probability of market acceptance and actual implementation."

1 of 160 comments (clear)

  1. Re:I am no chip designer..... by Vellmont · · Score: 0, Flamebait


    but when you tell me that replacing copper wires with a (wireless) transmitter and receiver helps save power: well I am a non-believer.

    Uhh.. and what about being a software developer qualifies you to have a valid opinion on saving power in radio transmission? I'm a software developer as well, and I found it surprising... but it astonishes me that you think you have the ability to have any kind of valid opinion on something so far afield of your area of expertise.

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