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Welcome to the alternative energy and sustainable power blog written by an engineer for engineers! Here we cover alternative energy and fuel technologies buzzing through the media including solar, wind, fuel cells, hydro, nuclear, ethanol, natural gas, hydrogen, bio-diesel, and more. Topics in conservation, sustainable development, and distributed generation will also be covered as will emerging energy technologies including nuclear fusion, nanotechnology, and bio-power systems.


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Sunday, February 10, 2008

Although Revolutionary, WiTricity is a Technology We Cannot Adopt

Feb 10 2008 6:52PM | Permalink | Email this | Comments (2) |
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Reducing wireless energy transfer to practice through resonant evanescent coupling by Prof. Marin Soljacic and others at MIT has raised some interesting criticisms. For example, my blog post, “MIT Team Invents ‘WiTricity’ Wireless Energy Transfer” received the following reader comment from a fellow named Larry:

 

“How does this sit with the world’s energy problems? On the scale that this is envisaged to be applied, the losses are enormous,” said Larry. “Further, resonant coupling is nothing new; e.g. RFID. The MIT folks should be embarrassed, putting out nonsense like this.”

 

The later portion of Larry’s comment was echoed by others who wrote into Physics Today after WiTricity was announced to punch holes in the concept. Resonant coupling, they say, is not new. Once such letter representing this criticism appeared in “Unwired energy questions asked, answered” in September 2007.

 

Physics Today allowed the MIT researchers to respond: “Resonant-electromagnetic-induction technology has been inadequate to efficiently power, over mid-range distances, devices that require on the order of tens of watts of power or more. Our work demonstrates that it is the physics of strong coupling, for which resonance is a prerequisite, that enables the efficient wireless energy transfer needed for larger power applications.”

 

As a scientist, I stand by my original blog commentary. The resonant evanescent coupling work by Soljacic, et al. is fundamentally different than any pre-existing wireless energy transfer technique. However, as an engineer, I cannot counter the first portion of Larry’s criticism; WiTricity wastes energy.

 

According to Soljacic’s original article, the energy transfer efficiency of the WiTricity technique is about 40% over a 2-meter distance. Achieving global energy sustainability is a problem that will only be solved by attacking on two fronts: 1) improving renewable generation technology AND 2) improving end-use efficiency of energy utilization.

 

Unfortunately, I am forced to side with Larry on WiTricity. If this technique truly dissipates 60% of the input energy, we must elect to pass on WiTricity and be content to continue charging our laptops with hard-wired connections.

Related entries in: Design News | Electronics/Test | 




at 2/11/2008 2:42:53 AM, WEBWORK said:
Imagine this, that passing trucks & cars absorb electricity from the roadside as they travel remote highways lined with solar cells. The distance from the car underside and the witricity coils embedded in the roadway could be less than 12 inches. This would provide for a transmission efficiency of up to 95%. Even at 50% the energy tansmission then becomes economical because the cost to transmit the energy particularly for remote areas is greater for standard methods. Trucks could also give and take energy as they pass, for example a continuous stream of trucks passing a solar farm outside the city could retransmit the electrical energy back into the city grid when they reach it. Passing cars could also BUY electricity from mobile sellers. The fact of the matter is the WITHOUT using Witricity mankind is losing energy.

at 3/5/2008 7:11:22 AM, 2stepsAhead said:
Nicely said webwork.

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