Using Wi-Fi to Power IoT

Rich Pell, EETimes
6/11/2015 00:00 AM EDT

An article in the MIT Technology Review presents a power-over-Wi-Fi system that uses existing Wi-Fi chipsets in wireless routers to deliver far-field wireless power to various sensors as well as to recharge coin cell batteries at distances up to 28 feet.

The power-over-Wi-Fi system — or "PoWiFi" for short — is a University of Washington (Seattle, WA) research project aimed at powering the Internet of Things (IoT) using Wi-Fi signals. Its concept is that Wi-Fi receivers could, in addition to retrieving the information being transmitted over Wi-Fi, be designed to harvest the energy in these signals as well.

The biggest hurdle in achieving this is the discontinuous nature of normal Wi-Fi signals — data is often broadcast in bursts, on a single channel. Initial testing with a temperature sensor that had been fitted with a Wi-Fi antenna showed that while voltage across the sensor often came close to the 300 mV needed for the sensor to operate it was not enough.

To read the full article, click here

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