Summary: Need help with PR? If you are looking for
a great PR firm, you've found one. Walker Sands is a leading Chicago PR
firm with a strong track record that makes it one of top national PR agencies..
The U.S. based company “Fulton Innovation” has developed
a technology that enables wirelessly charging electrical devices. The
company demonstrated a series of products powered by “eCoupled Intelligent
Wireless Power” at the 2008 Consumer Electronics Show (CES) in Las-Vegas.
The engineers behind “eCoupled” say that the technology, which
has been under development for the past ten years, enables low-cost and
efficient wireless energy supply, which can be utilized “anywhere
traditional power needs exist”.
eCoupled relies on a well known principle of physics called “inductive
coupling” – a process in which energy is transferred from
one circuit component to another through a shared magnetic field. This
kind of power transmission isn’t limited to physically connected
devices, since the change in the current flow of one device is caused
by the influence of the other device on the magnetic field between them.
Fulton’s technology consists of an inductively coupled power circuit
that dynamically seeks resonance, continuously communicating with a primary
supply circuit, which monitors each device within its control range and
supplies it with the determined optimal amount of power to keep it at
peak efficiency.
The scientists say eCoupled overcomes the limitations of spatial rigidity,
static loads and unacceptable power losses often associated with wireless
systems, intelligently adapting to multiple loads – from milliwatts
to kilowatts, reportedly reaching energy transfer efficiencies of approximately
98%. At the CES, the company demonstrated the wireless transmission of
1.4 kilowatts, which is the maximum power transfer achieved by eCoupled
to date. The technology is currently limited to a distance of about 2centimeters,
over which power can be transmitted without interfering with other short-range
signals.
At the company’s booth at the CES, eCoupled was demonstrated on
a variety of devices. Fulton showed how a small cradle with embedded eCoupled
technology could wirelessly charge any electrical device that was placed
in it, such as a cell phone, PDA, MP3 player, etc. A similar device lighted
up a variety of light bulbs, from the traditional incandescent bulbs to
halogen, fluorescent and neon bulbs. The company also showed off its “smart”
tabletop, which was embedded with eCoupled technology and was able to
supply power to about anything that was put on its surface - from heating
up kettles and frying pans to charging laptops and lighting up light bulbs
by selectively transmitting the exact amount of electricity required by
each of these devices. “We envision that this becomes ubiquitous
and the standard for providing power wirelessly in a whole variety of
portable and not so portable devices” – said Dave Hazlett,
Director of Business Development at Fulton Innovations.
One of the core issues the company focused on during the development
stage was the safety of such wireless communications. Fulton has developed
a unique identification protocol, which has the ability to authenticate
any eCoupled-enabled device within its range. If the “base station”
does not immediately recognize the component, it won’t supply it
with power. The base station can also determine whether a certain device
requires power at all – for example, if a given component is fully
charged, the primary power supply will stop the energy transfer.
According to Fulton, eCoupled can be applied to all products that require
electric power. In fact, this technology has already been used in Alticor’s
eSpring water purification systems, which use ultraviolet light technology
to remove contaminants and destroy bacteria and viruses that reside in
tap water. eCoupled technology helped eSpring engineers solve some of
the challenges they faced at the time, including the unwanted heating
of the water, caused by the ultraviolet lamp. The technology allowed for
high-powered wireless energy transfer to the lamp, reducing energy consumption
and ambient heat.
Fulton is currently working on a technology that will allow the base station
to be incorporated inside a desktop, so that eCoupled-connected devices
could be charged simply by being placed over certain spots.
TFOT previously covered other wireless power transmission technologies,
such as the wireless charging pad invented by "WildCharge",
and a wireless power transmission method that was developed by MIT scientists.
Using this method, the scientists succeeded to light a 60 watt light bulb
wirelessly from a distance of about 2 meters. You can also check out the
levitating wirelessly-powered light bulb presented this year at the Sonar
Exhibition in Barcelona by artist Jeff Lieberman from Cambridge, Massachusetts.
Copyright © 2008. TFOT.