A Tablecloth to Charge Your Laptop 119
moscowde writes "Research scientists at the University of Tokyo have come up with a unique sheet-like material that can transmit electrical energy over a large area to nearby devices without the need for direct contact, so it can be made into a tablecloth or wallpaper and your appliance can be anywhere on a surface to get charged.
The system uses organic molecules as transistors, microelectromechanical switches, and miniature copper coils to transmit energy using electromagnetic induction."
Replace for power cables and plugs? (Score:4, Interesting)
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Tom
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Re:Replace for power cables and plugs? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Replace for power cables and plugs? (Score:5, Funny)
13. Large calculator
You mention your powerbook twice...
I KEED! I keed.....
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different requirements (Score:2)
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Re:different requirements (Score:5, Insightful)
Sometimes it's nice to just plug something in and have it work without worrying about the environment.
And sure a power "pad" sounds nice but take into account the power loss. The thing most likely converts AC to DC [power loss], then from DC to EM [power loss], from EM to DC in the device [power loss]. So you'll be burning more energy to get the same amount of work done. Not exactly a step forwards.
Tom
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It's also nice to not plug something in, and have it work without worrying about the environment. It's not the plugging part that makes it not nice, it's the not worrying part.
I have one wifi AP that I can access from all points on my own property, upstairs and downstairs. My neighbors both have wifi, too. It all works just fine, even when I use my Bluetooth headset and my microwave.
I'm sure that some
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You are changing your typing and mousing position throughout the day, right?
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Namely, it's nice, but each device works with the adaptor that came with it and nothing else, so you still need one wire per device...
Nothing (Score:4, Interesting)
My questions on this would be more focused on how practical it'll actually be, unless it's standardised so that different devices can charge off it, and on how wasteful it is, if it's throwing out energy even when nothing needs it.
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And standardisation would definitely be good, so we don't end up having to buy a Sony tablecloth for cellphones, Dell tablecloth for laptops and Philips tablecloth for the toaster.
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There are a lot of standards - too bad SONY chose not to use them. Do you really think they would let you use your no-name charger pad instead of buying their special SONY-pad for three times the money?
s/SONY/Apple|Nintendo/
How efficient is it? In these days... (Score:3, Insightful)
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I don't care if that tablecloth has checkered patterns and makes my Italian cooking better, if it costs me more than it is worth, I ain't buying it.
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Liquid Spills (Score:3, Informative)
Tablecloths and wallpapers? (Score:5, Insightful)
I mean, what could possibly go wrong? After all little Jimmy's third arm is quite handy.
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or the big news right now, Colony Collapse Disorder [wikipedia.org].
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And it is happening in a lot of places no where near enough to man made magnetic fields right?
No, lets look at something that couldn't possible do it.
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Underwriter's Lab approved? (Score:2)
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You would be more likely to put your metal cup down on the table and then burn your hand trying to pick it up. Induction is a widely used method of heating pots and pans for cooking. Induce a current in a metal pot and it will heat up due to the resistance of the metal.
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electricity + table (Score:1)
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Efficiency (Score:2)
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Waiter! (Score:5, Funny)
No problem Sir, (Score:2)
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Tesla did it 100 years ago (Score:3, Interesting)
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Wardenclyffe tower would have never worked, intensity of electromagnetic field obeys inverse square law, so you'll need a LARGE antennae to catch more than a few milliwatts at a distance more than a few hundred meters.
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Go higher in frequency, a smaller antenna is required, yet RF density at a distance will not change (much).
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Additionally, energy density of electromagnetic WAVES is proportional to the cube of its frequency, so it's much easier to transmit a lot of power at high frequences. For example, ELF transmitters use hundreds of kilowatts of electric power but output just a few _watts_ in ELF radio frequences. But the ease of transmission has nothing to do with inverse square law.
And you'll
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BTW, the reason ELF antennas have such small ERP is because of the relationship of the distance of the radiator above the ground compared to the wavelength, as well as, the relatively short length
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Either way, great to see that they've been able to keep the efficiency heigh, 80% is really not bad for an induction system.
From TFA
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from yesterday:
The 660 Gallon Brewery Fuel Cell [slashdot.org]
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So... when will this technology finally reach our laptops and mobile phones... the first expectations were telling about somewhere in 2006 IIRC, I guess they were wrong
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Re:Tesla did it 100 years ago (Score:5, Interesting)
It worked great and if you did your calculations right the tailored recivers for each device were incredibly easy to build and interface to the device. I modified a Motorola Brock phone to charge from a coil I placed in it's battery compartment.
The only reason thses things do not take off is that device makers make HUGE $$$ off of "accessories" like chargers. Dell rapes you blind on their charger prices, Apple and Nokia do the same. and they all go out of their way to make sure it uses a wierd voltage and wierd connector to make sure you cant easily use something else.
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I was a big smart-arse back in college and I was asked that question by someone else in the class.
my response was "Why you Die a horrible electric death of course. It also fuctions as a Gene pool cleaning device."
In reality it's 100% safe unless you put it under your pillow and sleep with your head on it. I demoed it with a glass of water sitting on it as well as a set of keys. The keys did not even warm up but do act as a co
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Any idea what the efficiency of something like this is compared to say, a wire?
How about "standby mode" as has become so popular in all sorts of appliances these days, can the tablecloth sense that no one is drawing its current and dial it back a notch until someone is?
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care to post a link to your work? I'd be courious to take a look at it...
Or do you have paper copies only?
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- you can't select who receives the power: your laptop will recharge, but your engagement ring will burn your finger off.
- most of the emitted power will dissipate into thin air.
Of course, this product improves on the idea by powering only the area closest to the device to recharge.
Dammit, I had this nice article explaining some promising research in the field, but I'm unable to find it again...
T
What's that tingling? (Score:2)
I wonder what this would feel like? I imagine it would have a pretty high level of output, I wonder what frequency it runs at and if it will bother some people. It could make being anywhere near one of these charging tabl
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If I were you I'd be experimenting with that tablet using my own fleshy stylus. Assuming you have one.
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I dont think the tablets create anything yuo can actually feel. Hell, the tablets are passive, the actual power is in the pen with the battery. Chalk this up to being psychosomatic. I used to believe I could feel wifi signals if they were too close to my head. Doing a blind test proved I was wrong.
Maybe things are different nowadays with the battery free pen. Still, thats really a small amount of energy.
electric blanket (Score:1)
Dupe (Score:1)
http://hardware.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=07/04/ 30/1630217 [slashdot.org]
Article references to University of Tokyo and organic molecules as well.
Two questions (Score:2)
2. Will it give me brain cancer?
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2- No risk. EM field have been studied for long, and such a low power quasi static field is way below things known to be harmless. Plus, since the field is supposed to be located only where it is needed and not all the time in the whole room, it won't probably not even reach you. Using an electric shave will probably send more EM radiation to your head.
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2. Will it give me superspeed and/or ability to manipulate electricity at will?
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old news grandma! (Score:1)
New twist on older design (Score:2, Informative)
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J.
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Still, Splashpower is neat too.
A Victorian Idea! (Score:3, Interesting)
The table lamps replicated old oil lamps in style but had spikes which poked in to table clothes which were threaded with copper wire carrying current. This meant you could carry them around, put them down, and they would just light.
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Live Green, Go Yellow... (?)
Trousers? (Score:2)
Side effects? (Score:2)
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Shock the conference room (Score:2)
With this, they can be 'charging' and also 'shocked' when needed...
Phillips (Score:1)
Hamsters.... (Score:1)
I'd be willing to try this out with my laptop. Aero on my Vista eats the battery so if this'll give me power without cords..woo hoo!
My practical concern (Score:2)
Induction is nothing new. Submersible waterpumps use inductive impellers. Every chemistry lab I've ever been in has used both inductive mixers and inductive heaters. This is all established, stable technology.
Even inductive charging is nothing new - I've had a toothbrush that does this for years.
So when I read articles about inductive mats saving me from my rat's nest of cables, don't think I'm not enthusiastic about the prospect. My concern, though, which I haven't yet seen addressed adequately, is what
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I seriously doubt this gives off a strong enough magnetic force to damage your equipment.
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YOu do know that hard drives have powerfull magnets in them, right?
I do, actually. I also know that, as part of the device, the fields the generate are taken into account when designing the device.
Floppy drives have their own magnets, too, but I have never seen a disk erased by such. I have seen a disk done in by environmental EM, though.
I seriously doubt this gives off a strong enough magnetic force to damage your equipment.
Perhaps not. I hope not. Still, it's enough for me to wonder, and want to proceed with caution.
Splashpower (Score:1)
Hopefully they'll actually have their modules out for public use sometime soon...
Big uses in corporations (Score:1)
Table dancers beware! (Score:1)
Have you ever been in a ground-floor office where the electric power was run over the concrete floor below the carpet, without trenching the concrete? And if you've worked in an office like this you know that women's high heels tend to drive that steel spike down into the material and cause an explosive short across the damp concrete.
Best not use your electric table cloth in the wrong kind of establishment. Spill a beer, go to jail!
Nice try, but debunked around 1880 (Score:2)
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this would be frickin' cool... (Score:2)
How about also building in the ability to communicate when on the pad? That way your pda or cell phone could automaticaly sync when on the pad. How about mouse pads that charge the mouse?
H
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(almost) no dupes.
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as long as the surface the "cloth" is on is level, there is no problem.
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