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在线翻译:
szdaily -> Tech and Science -> 
You may use your body to charge phones
    2021-07-19  08:53    Shenzhen Daily

WIRELESS charging is a smartphone feature we’ve come to take for granted. But wireless charging tech is only in its infancy, and what we currently refer to as wireless charging is very limited. To wirelessly recharge a battery, we need particular components installed in smartphones, watches and headphones. We then place these gadgets on a charging mat or in a case, and we can’t use them while they recharge. Wireless charging is little more than a convenience that allows us to continually top-up the smartphone’s battery while we’re not using it.

Several companies, such as Xiaomi, Oppo and Motorola, are already developing long-distance wireless charging. But researchers from Singapore have developed an even more unusual way of charging a device wirelessly. They want to use the human body to pass power from a smartphone placed in the user’s pocket to a wearable on their wrist, or the other way around.

The National University of Singapore’s (NUS) Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering team published their findings in Nature Electronics. The technology is meant to deal with the body-shadowing issues that might appear when wirelessly charging devices in a small indoor area. Rather than having a long-distance wireless charging system beam energy around a human body in the room, the new system would turn the body into an element that can power wireless charging.

The NUS scientists developed a body-coupled power transmission process to allow two or more devices to exchange power by using the human body as a medium. A transmitter is placed on a power source, like a smartwatch on the wrist. The system can then harness energy from that source to recharge multiple devices in close proximity to the user, each featuring a receiver. The transmitter and receiver would contain chips that make the power transmission possible.

This would allow a user to only worry about recharging a single device without taking off wearable gadgets like a smartwatch or wireless earphones. A smartphone with its bigger battery would make a better candidate for beaming up the energy to wearables around the user.

Furthermore, the NUS researchers looked at whether the human body could collect energy from the immediate environment and turn it into power that could recharge the batteries of nearby wearable devices. The team tried to harvest the electromagnetic waves that people are routinely exposed to at the office or at home, like laptops or other electronics. But it’s too early to tell if this technology will be used in commercial devices.(SD-Agencies)

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