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Science

Wireless Electricity Set to Power Village 384

freedommatters writes "The UK Sunday Times has a story today about how "Scientists have successfully applied the technology used in microwave ovens to beam electricity without the need for unsightly pylons and overhead cables." A prototype has illuminated a handful of light bulbs and they expect to be able to power a remote village within three years."
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Wireless Electricity Set to Power Village

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  • by UWC ( 664779 ) on Sunday April 27, 2003 @11:29AM (#5819237)
    I can feel my brain warming already.
    • I heard they also managed to rid the village of their nasty pigeon problem and end a local famon. Congrats, gentlemen!

      P.S. I can't even register to read the article. Anyone got a mirror/cache? Nothing on Google yet...
      =Smidge=
    • by UWC ( 664779 ) on Sunday April 27, 2003 @11:43AM (#5819314)
      I've been modded Troll? Come on, people that work around microwave antennas do have higher incidences of cancers. The cooking properties of microwaves were discovered by accident.

      It's a genuine concern, and I was just addressing it rather light-heartedly. I've done science fair projects on EMF effects on plants, and I have observed differences in growth patterns; there is an observable effect on biological systems. The risks are real, and there should be more study before they start beaming out microwaves that can power homes.
      • Hum (Score:5, Insightful)

        by f97tosc ( 578893 ) on Sunday April 27, 2003 @12:47PM (#5819651)
        In order for this to work, they would have to make the beam extremely focused from transmitted to receiver.

        If they don't do this, not only do they get the heatlh issues you point out, but the system simply won't work in practice.

        All energy that is not captured by the receiver is lost.

        Tor
        • Re:Hum (Score:5, Interesting)

          by tunabomber ( 259585 ) on Sunday April 27, 2003 @02:28PM (#5820103) Homepage
          In order for this to work, they would have to make the beam extremely focused from transmitted to receiver.

          The article isn't very specific, but I would guess that they would have either used a parabolic reflector or a maser to do this.
          A parabolic reflector could focus the microwaves into a beam, much like that of a flashlight, but some energy would be lost to diffraction. A maser is similar to a laser, only it emits a coherant beam of microwaves that would travel from transmitter to receiver with minimum energy loss.
      • by MarkusQ ( 450076 ) on Sunday April 27, 2003 @12:47PM (#5819652) Journal

        Come on, people that work around microwave antennas do have higher incidences of cancers.

        I am aware of cancer clusters around some high voltage power lines that was traced to chemical compounds (used in the insulators, IIRC), but no responsible studies that link microwave antennas to cancer. (I use the qualification "responsible" because I have seen "studies" by the cell-phones-are-killing-us wackos that make the claim, but their methods were so flawed it was funny.)

        -- MarkusQ

        • High voltage power lines do not cause cancer. There may be a correlation, but it's probably about the same as the correlation of construction workers and cancer patients.

          Microwave, however, does tend to cause cancer, boiling, and generally being baked. That's the idea. That's why there's lead in your microwave oven's faceplate. It's really not just there to make it harder for you to see the secrets of the microwave.
          • It's not lead, it's usually copper. The microwave oven generally produces no xray or other "nuclear-esque" radiation, so they use a conductive wire (copper usually) grid, grounded, with holes smaller than the wavelength, to block the microwaves.

            Now, an interesting one is the amount of lead in CRT glass. CRT's and X-Ray tubes are surprisingly similar...

      • by spineboy ( 22918 ) on Sunday April 27, 2003 @01:28PM (#5819855) Journal
        That old power line thing was disputed a while ago - mostly just a media fad. I was working at the NIH with one of the guys who first noticed the magnetic field effect on celles in culture.
        It has never been shown to cause any cancers.
        Radiat Res 2000 May;153(5 Pt 2):627-36 Related Articles,
        Leukemia and lymphoma incidence in rodents exposed to low-frequency magnetic fields.
        Boorman GA, Rafferty CN, Ward JM, Sills RC.

        The PCB coolants used in/around many of those power stations is another subject.

        Just to help hammer the nail home, there are many FDA approved devices that use magnetic or pulsed elctronic field devices to aid in bone healing. No reports of cancer yet in these either. Some increased cell growth yes, but cancer no.

        This kinda crap science is usually perpetuated by the media and lawyers hoping to make a few bucks (well, usually they want a few million).
        Bah!
      • Well, provided it is in the right part of the spectrum, the human body might have a relatively low absorbtion rate. Certainly, when we think microwaves, we think microwave oven, but that's only a small part of the microwave spectrum.

        The more important point, though is that this may actually cause far less ambient electromagnetic radiation than normal power lines. Ordinary power lines carrying AC current are basically like large antennae (though if properly designed, they are hopefully not very good ante

    • I can feel my brain warming already.

      ...but the link takes me to a page with this bit:

      The area you wish to access requires you to be a registered user or a subscriber to Times Online. If you are already a subscriber or registered user, please log in with your existing user name and password on the left. If you are new to Times Online, please click the Register button. The registration process will take less than five minutes and you will only have to do it once This Times Online log in does not include

    • Electricity can be beamed through the air without a pylon in sight
      Roger Dobson
      SCIENTISTS have successfully applied the technology used in microwave ovens to beam electricity without the need for unsightly pylons and overhead cables.

      The power is fired through the air in the form of microwaves and collected in special antennas that reconvert the microwaves into electricity.

      A prototype of the wireless power technology has shown the system works and a full-scale version is now being built to make a remote vil
      • Guess who invented this technique? Nikola Tesla. These scientists may have built a system to use this, but they aren't the first ones. Read [mind-course.com] for yourself.
  • Tumor-Tastic (Score:2, Informative)

    by jonathonc ( 267596 ) *
    It's a cool technology but if it's implemented there would be even more radiation for our brains to absorb.

    Dr. David Carpenter, Dean at the School of Public Health, State University of New York believes it is likely that up to 30% of all childhood cancers come from exposure to EMFs. The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) warns "There is reason for concern" and advises prudent avoidance".
    • Read that carefully. (Score:3, Informative)

      by Anonymous Coward
      He "believes that it is likely." That doesn't mean he had any empirical evidence whatsoever.

      Repeated controlled studies have shown that there is no connection between power lines and cancers except in the sense that neighborhoods near power lines tend to be of poorer people who have a higher incidence of cancer due to lifestyles (i.e., they smoke a lot).
      • by kavau ( 554682 ) on Sunday April 27, 2003 @01:58PM (#5819982) Homepage
        We are talking about microwave radiation here, not about power lines! The radiation emitted from power lines is in the 50-Hz range, while microwaves are in the GHz (1E9 Hz) range. Naturally, the higher the frequency, the more damage the radiation can do (this is elementary quantum mechanics: the energy of a photon is given by planck's constant times the frequency). Comparing microwaves to power lines therefore does not make sense at all.

        I recall reading, a while back, an article about a "microwave cannon" planned by the military. Supposedly it's effect is to raise the temperature of the enemy soldiers' brain tissue by a few degrees, which renders them unconcious. I could imagine that the energy needed to power a light bulb could have a similar effect on your brain, albeit weaker. But it might still make you feel uncoordinated and "feverish".

        On the other hand, I'd love to have a microwave power supply for my laptop :-)

    • by T-Kir ( 597145 ) on Sunday April 27, 2003 @11:54AM (#5819378) Homepage

      Well there is plenty of radiation going around from mobile phone masts, which are either being built next to schools or hidden in the price towers of petrol stations. There was a local news report about a village where they've had a mobile phone mast for the past 10 years and the amount of cancer cases has gone up significantly... one woman who has had major problems takes the news team through her house with a radiation detector and the thing buzzes away even more when she goes upstairs! I can't find a link on the web but here is a start [bbc.co.uk]

      Back to the mobile power, it always makes me think of SimCity 2000 with the Microwave powerplants and the warning of a misdirected beam hitting your city instead of the plant.

      • Re:Tumor-Tastic (Score:4, Insightful)

        by Idarubicin ( 579475 ) on Sunday April 27, 2003 @01:16PM (#5819779) Journal
        There was a local news report about a village where they've had a mobile phone mast for the past 10 years and the amount of cancer cases has gone up significantly...

        A 'village'...how many people is that? Two or three hundred? 'Significantly'--what is meant by that? Here's a hypothetical case. Question: If between 1980 and 1990 there are four cases of cancer, and between 1990 and 2000 there are eight cases in this little village, what does that tell us?

        Answer: Nothing. The newsmedia will be on their hind legs shouting that the cancer rate has doubled! The village statistician might tell you that the sample is too small--it's just as likely that there will only be two more cases between 2000 and 2010. The epidemiologist down the street will note that a lot of people have moved into the new retirement community, and that older people are more likely to develop cancers. The local toxicologist (it's a village full of professionals) could observe that a refinery closed upstream about twenty years ago, and is probably leaching mutagenic nasties into the creek. The town dietitian sees that McDonald's opened a new restaurant in the village about fifteen years ago, and wonders.

        So what's the solution? Blame the cell tower. Why? Because you can see it. It sticks up. It's obvious. It's easy. The drunk drops his keys in a dark alley. He immediately steps out of the alley and begins to carefully scrutinize the gound around a nearby street light. Why? Because they light is better over there.

        You've supplied us with an anecdotal report of an anecdotal report. Recent large-scale studies of EMFs show no link between moderate electric or magnetic fields (comparable to those associated with living near power lines or the use of cellular phones) and cancer. Gee.

      • Build a faraday cage into your house if you're that worried about it. It shouldn't be that hard.
      • A "radiation detector" - like a Geiger counter? Wrong type of instrument for EMF. If she was using a Geiger and it was a'clicking away, she probably has radon seepage problems; common in modern homes.

        All you need to detect high levels of EMF is a flourescent light bulb.

        SB
      • Re:Tumor-Tastic (Score:3, Informative)

        by Ioldanach ( 88584 )

        Well there is plenty of radiation going around from mobile phone masts, (snip) There was a local news report about a village where they've had a mobile phone mast for the past 10 years and the amount of cancer cases has gone up significantly... one woman who has had major problems takes the news team through her house with a radiation detector and the thing buzzes away even more when she goes upstairs! (snip)

        LOL

        You realise, of course, a radiation detector that clicks/buzzes is probably a geiger counter.

    • by Idou ( 572394 ) on Sunday April 27, 2003 @01:40PM (#5819910) Journal
      We aren't certain about the effects of EMF exposure, so we are going to find some poor village without electricity and offer them electricity through microwaves. The expirement can pay for itself through the utility fees we charge the villagers.

      Boy, did I wake up cranky today . . .
    • by TopShelf ( 92521 ) on Sunday April 27, 2003 @01:59PM (#5819991) Homepage Journal
      But on the bright side, all you have to do is lift a hot dog on a stick up into the air, and you've got lunch in under 2 minutes!
    • "Dr. David Carpenter, Dean at the School of Public Health, State University of New York believes it is likely that up to 30% of all childhood cancers come from exposure to EMFs"

      Solution: Use sunscreen.

      Seriously, that sentence is so decidedly vague that I'm tempted to say it was intentional to scare up more research money. "Electromagnetic frequencies" is such a vague term that you don't know if he's talking about shortwave radio or gamma radiation (or anything in between). I wouldn't be surprised if t
  • is obsolete.
  • Any Risks? (Score:3, Funny)

    by YahoKa ( 577942 ) on Sunday April 27, 2003 @11:30AM (#5819245)
    I wonder if there are risks of this? I mean, how long until their fish have 3 eyes, and children are born with 4 feet?
    ... oh well, as long as it's being tested on some small village and not me :D
  • Tesla's Legacy (Score:2, Interesting)

    by Whigh ( 663324 )
    Didn't Tesla already do this? He was just dubbed insane and hounded while others stole his ideas. Case in point: Marconi
    • Re:Tesla's Legacy (Score:3, Informative)

      by drinkypoo ( 153816 )
      Tesla was using RF generated by a tesla coil, not microwave. The receiver for this power broadcast? A rectifier and an antenna. I don't know if that's what they're doing here, I didn't bother to read the article. :) This technology is used in the Wacom tablets and apparently they have a patent for using it in that application, the bastards. As if that weren't an obvious thing to do with the technology.
      • Re:Tesla's Legacy (Score:3, Interesting)

        by Anonymous Coward
        Anyone know how useful these patents are?

        645,576 Sept. 2, 1897 System of Transmission of Electrical Energy
        649,621 Sept. 2, 1897 Apparatus for Transmission of Electrical Energy
        685,957 Apparatus for the Utilization of Radiant Energy
        685,958 Method of Utilizing of Radiant Energy
        1,119,732 Jan. 18, 1902 Apparatus for Transmitting Electrical Energy
        • Radio (Score:4, Interesting)

          by ArchieBunker ( 132337 ) on Sunday April 27, 2003 @12:23PM (#5819527)
          Tesla won the patent for radio because his plans included both a transmitter and receiver, while Marconi only had a transmitter. Transmit all you want but its worthless without a way to capture the transmissions.
    • Re:Tesla's Legacy (Score:4, Interesting)

      by Tomato3 ( 557456 ) on Sunday April 27, 2003 @12:29PM (#5819557) Journal
      "The scientific man does not aim at an immediate result. He does not expect that his advanced ideas will be readily taken up. His work is like that of the planter - for the future. His duty is to lay the foundation for those who are to come, and point the way."
      -Nikola Tesla
  • by termos ( 634980 ) on Sunday April 27, 2003 @11:32AM (#5819250) Homepage
    In the beginning they called it lightning, now they call it Wireless Electricity!
  • Dangers? (Score:4, Interesting)

    by Eight 01 ( 614650 ) on Sunday April 27, 2003 @11:32AM (#5819253)
    I assume the microwave beam would have to be highly focused in order to work. What safegaurds are there to make sure nothing gets in the way of the beam?

    (the article is unavailable without a $55 subscription, maybe it is spelled out in the article?)
    • Re:Dangers? (Score:5, Funny)

      by Loosewire ( 628916 ) on Sunday April 27, 2003 @11:41AM (#5819307) Homepage Journal
      What safegaurds are there to make sure nothing gets in the way of the beam?

      I think theyre going to put wires around it which are held up by pylons...
    • No safeguards whatsoever -- Mr. Burns is going to block out the beam and charge the good citizens of Springfield!
    • Re:Dangers? (Score:4, Insightful)

      by silverhalide ( 584408 ) on Sunday April 27, 2003 @01:49PM (#5819944)
      It has to be somewhat focused, but it can be focused over a very wide area using large dishes, on the order of 10s of meters. Remember, the power density will decrease at the square of the radius (area=pi*r^2). The end result is an energy level that's only slightly above that of what you get during the day by being outside, but when it gets concentrated by the dish on the receiving end, the power is all there. This was the same idea behind that orbital solar to microwave array -- the receiving dish would be a few hundred meters across so stuff that gets in the way of the beam won't be instantly cooked.

      Say you want to beam 10,000 watts of power somewhere. If you have a 1-foot radius dish, your power per square foot is ~3100 watts. Your typical microwave is somewhere in the order of 500-1000 watts per square foot. You'd get fried if you touch that beam. However, increase your dish size to 25 feet in radius. You're down to 5 watts per square foot. The OSHA safe level of exposure is about .2 watts/square foot, so it's still dangerous, but not to the point of instant death anymore.

      The idea is that converting microwave energy is more efficent than converting solar energy (I forget why, but theoretically solar panels can not be more than 30-50% efficent, no matter what), so this would be quite interesting if it worked out well.
  • by Anonymous Coward
    If only he had more money to make it work [braincourse.com].
  • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday April 27, 2003 @11:35AM (#5819267)
    Is a similar concept. Radiation from the sun converted into electricity.
  • *scratches head* (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Skyshadow ( 508 ) on Sunday April 27, 2003 @11:38AM (#5819283) Homepage
    You know, I worry about sitting in front of a CRT for extended periods or standing by the microwave when it's cooking something or living near high voltage lines.

    Call me an alarmist, but I want to see the 50-year health studies before I go to something this, er, extreme. I mean, it could be completely harmless, but it just *seems* like something so potentially fraught with problems that my instinct is to avoid it.

  • Let the Uncle Fester Jokes Begin! ...and to think 3 years ago someone asked about wireless networking when network cables were not put in a building as planned, but also power.

    Luser: Can we also get wireless power too?

    Me: Yes, it is called "lightening".

    (other techs and cow-workers ROTFL)
  • by adzoox ( 615327 ) on Sunday April 27, 2003 @11:42AM (#5819310) Journal
    Can anyone explain the economics of the current line/poll implementation?

    Why aren't lines buried to be less obtrusive, better insulated, and non-problematic in ice storms?

    Recently, in February, South Carolina, my home state, had a very bad ice storm. It was called "the worst on record". Why was it called that? It wasn't really the worst. Duke Power, our service provider, has failed to maintain the lines in there above ground condition. Lots of trees had grown through power even over and around some lines. Then there was the typical stupid driver who ran into a number of poles all over the area.

    I was without power for 4 days. Luckily, I had an UPS unit from a server that has 40 hours and I use a laptop as my main computer. It powered everything in my place including a small heater for a while.

    To be on topic, eventhough the above is too: I don't think we should be pushing conventional power to 3rd world countries. With this implementation of "beaming power" - power still has to be generated at a plant with with most likely a non renewable resource. Why can't we give these same people advanced windmills and solar cells? (Then teach them maintenance) That makes so much more sense. I see the costs of even an experiment; very high. Also, I think Microwaves at a ground level would interfere with radio communications at the points below the transmission.

    • Why can't we give these same people advanced windmills and solar cells? (Then teach them maintenance)

      Solar and wind power aren't going to be the answer. At this point, both are dilute power sources. Additionally, maintenance of solar and wind generating facilities requires more than just "teach[ing] them maintenance". It requires spare/replacement parts which are usually very expensive and have short lifespans.

    • an anyone explain the economics of the current line/poll implementation?

      Why aren't lines buried to be less obtrusive, better insulated, and non-problematic in ice storms?

      Well, you basically identified the issue in your question. It's all about economics. Pylons are just plain cheaper. I have a book that claims the cost of 1 mile of electric cable underground is 1 million pounds sterling vs about 400,000 or 500,000 for pylons. (This book was published in the UK, but I bet the ratio is the same betwe

    • oops, screwed up the HTML the first time...

      Can anyone explain the economics of the current line/poll implementation?

      Why aren't lines buried to be less obtrusive, better insulated, and non-problematic in ice storms?

      Well, you basically identified the issue in your question. It's all about economics. Pylons are just plain cheaper. I have a book that claims the cost of 1 mile of electric cable underground is 1 million pounds sterling vs about 400,000 or 500,000 for pylons. (This book was published in t

    • My local power coop says that underground lines are LESS reliable than above ground. Sure tree can fall on above ground wires, but moles can chew through underground wires. The difference isn't big, but it is statisticly significant: there are more outages in underground wires than above ground.

      The arguement for underground is looks. People don't like looking at power poles. (personally I think a power pole running through the yard is less intrusive than the big transformers they put in front of a hosu

  • Microwave power transmission always seemed like a slick idea until you try to control whatever line-of-sight airspace connects your transmitter and receiver. I would like to see this supersized in a satellite sending solar radiation down to earth-bound substations... but what about all the pretty birdies? Taste like chicken I guess...
  • Boardcast power is an interesting idea. I wonder how this solves the issue of power falling off with the square of the distance. Also, what is broadcast can be received, often unintentionally as interference. I can't say that I want to receive broadcast power on my radio, TV or fillings.
    • I wonder how this solves the issue of power falling off with the square of the distance.

      I couldn't get to the article but I would assume they use a MASER [stanford.edu]. So if you conceptualize this as power being transmitted by a LASER then you should understand why interference should not be an issue and that the power does not attenuate according to the inverse square law. As other people have already pointed out though, birds flying into the beam could be killed. It gives new meaning to the phrase 'your goose is c

    • The inverse square law isn't about power disappearing.. it's about energy density (if that's the right term) It just means if you measure the energy spread over a certain area at distance n, then the energy density over that same area at distance 2n will be 1/4 as much, and at 3n will be 1/9 as much.

      So.. look at something like, a typical laser pen with a nicely columnated beam. Say at 1km the red dot is 1m^2 (just a guess).
      Now, if we pretend it's a vacuum and we aren't losing energy due to reflection off
  • ...the Fat battery [cleveland.com]. We could beam our extra electricity directly to the grid!

    But seriously, this wireless electricity must p*ss off those projects trying to provide internet connectivity via power lines...

  • by tuxlove ( 316502 ) on Sunday April 27, 2003 @11:43AM (#5819320)
    Tesla was pushing "broadcast power". It was doomed to failure because of the problems inherent in charging the atmosphere. What they are proposing here is quite different. Haven't read the article, but I'm slightly familiar with the concept here. You simply convert electricity into microwave radiation and transmit it in a tight beam to a receiving station. No problem, old hat. Doing it on this scale might be a challenge, though. On the other end you have a receiver that converts that radiation back to usable electricity. Quite a different problem. I suspect that's what they're pioneering here. I think it has actually been done before, but not in any practical way. Powering a few lightbulbs isn't exactly practical either, but it would be if you could power a small town, or even just several buildings.

    But keep out of the way of the beam!! I have to wonder about the environmental damage of birds/insects flying through it and getting cooked.

    I remember reading about a proposal to send power to the earth this way. By having a massive solar cell array in space transmitting microwaves to a giant receiver on earth, you could gather lots of energy. The thought of this thing getting off track and aiming at, say, NYC seems a little too scary, though.
    • by Maudib ( 223520 ) on Sunday April 27, 2003 @12:53PM (#5819677)
      I remember reading about a proposal to send power to the earth this way. By having a massive solar cell array in space transmitting microwaves to a giant receiver on earth, you could gather lots of energy.

      Yeah, the "Proposal" was called Sim City 3000 as I recall. I also recall the "proposal" included random attacks by godzilla.
    • Definitely old hat - I remember seeing a CBC TV news story 12+ years ago when I was still in high school.

      The story showed video* of a truck with a big 6-8 foot microwave disk mounted on the back, tracking a small unmanned plan - the small unmanned plane had an electric prop and a 6+ foot flat dish on it's bottom. They were beaming power to it, in flight, via microwaves. And the "little" plane was remote controlled.

      Of course that was over smallish distances - hundreds of yards - it wasn't a long distance
  • Rectenna?! (Score:5, Funny)

    by psyconaut ( 228947 ) on Sunday April 27, 2003 @11:44AM (#5819324)
    "Microwaves for the electricity are targeted via antennas and reflectors at a ?rectenna? (from the words rectifier and antenna), "

    I'm glad they defined a rectenna for me...I thought it was an antenna you stuck up your ass! ;-)

    -psy
  • we can have electricity over IP [ietf.org] over 802.11b!
  • I tried to access the article on the Times site, was told to register, did so, was told to enter a "prize draw," did so (with false info), was told to pay for a subscription to the print edition, didn't do that.

    Going through Lynx I managed to get to user login, and after logging in was greeted with a nearly blank page.

    Anyone care to post the article, if they can even get to it?
  • by 2sleep2type ( 652900 ) on Sunday April 27, 2003 @11:45AM (#5819330)
    This is a more detailed publication pdf file [grandbassin.net]
  • by gaudior ( 113467 ) <{marktjohns} {at} {gmail.com}> on Sunday April 27, 2003 @11:45AM (#5819334) Homepage
    Five, Four, Three, Two, One....
  • Great! (Score:3, Insightful)

    by RyanFenton ( 230700 ) on Sunday April 27, 2003 @11:46AM (#5819342)
    Instead of having plentiful places for birds to rest in urbanized areas, we get partially cooked ones occasionally falling from the sky! Allright, not really - but it would be oddly funny to see a bird or insect perch in one area up high, enjoying unexpected warmth, then suddenly move away due to sudden discomfort or unexpected smell.

    I can't imagine that microwaves would end up anywhere near as efficient as wire transmission, but it is a nice idea for when you have a source of energy you otherwise couldn't capitalize on (like extra-planetory solar radiation in the recent Sim City games), and just want to siphon as much in a direction where you can't use more efficent methods.

    Ryan Fenton
    • I agree that this "new method" has the potential to be a problem for wildlife. But its not like above ground transmission lines don't have a problem -- many animals, and some people, are killed via electrocution. The question is safety significantly differ from that for above ground lines.
  • Mirror of Story (Score:5, Informative)

    by Anonymous Coward on Sunday April 27, 2003 @11:47AM (#5819352)
    Electricity can be beamed through the air without a pylon in sight
    Roger Dobson

    SCIENTISTS have successfully applied the technology used in microwave ovens to beam electricity without the need for unsightly pylons and overhead cables.
    The power is fired through the air in the form of microwaves and collected in special antennas that reconvert the microwaves into electricity.

    A prototype of the wireless power technology has shown the system works and a full-scale version is now being built to make a remote village on the French-governed island of Réunion in the Indian Ocean the world's first microwave-powered community.

    According to a report to be published this week, the system is a cheaper way than either solar energy or local generators of supplying remote areas not connected to a grid.

    "(Electricity) network distribution is effective at the centre but the costs increase quickly when you get to the edge," said Dr Guy Pignolet of CNES, the French space agency, which has conducted the trials.

    "Extending it to remote areas is very costly, but with microwave technology you do not have those costs. You also do not have pylons, which you may not want in sensitive areas."

    The technology works by converting direct current (DC) electricity into microwave power at the transmitting end in the same way that switching on a microwave oven converts electricity into waves using a device called a magnetron. Residents are unlikely to be baked as the frequencies in the two applications are entirely different.

    Microwaves for the electricity are targeted via antennas and reflectors at a "rectenna" (from the words rectifier and antenna), which absorbs the microwave energy from the beam and converts it back into DC power with diodes.

    In Grand-Bassin on Réunion, which lies at the bottom of a 3,000ft canyon with no road access, electricity is currently provided by solar panels placed on the roofs of the houses. But increasing the amount of electricity solely by using the panels is difficult because of the amount of surface area needed. It is also expensive.

    The researchers have successfully produced a field prototype to illuminate a handful of light bulbs. A second prototype is being finalised and will be in operation in about 10 months, while the whole project to supply the village with power is scheduled to be completed within three years.

    Additional reporting: Nick Speed

    • Re:Mirror of Story (Score:3, Informative)

      by GigsVT ( 208848 ) *
      They've probably demonstrated this from within the near field of the transmitter, something that isn't difficult.

      I have a feeling we won't hear any more about this "technology" (which is 50 years old). It's probably a borderline scam artist fishing for VC money.
  • A city-powering microwave plant that took electricity generated in space (the moon?) became avaliable in 2030. Perhaps the brains behind the game were not so far off with what seemed far fetched ideas.
  • Microwave power stations were great, until the beam lost its tracking slightly, sending it on a spectacular journey through your city.
  • by worst_name_ever ( 633374 ) on Sunday April 27, 2003 @11:53AM (#5819374)
    We once had a customer at the electronics design place I work for ask for a product with a size that was physically too small to contain the battery that they wanted to use. When informed of this, they asked, "well, couldn't you put the battery somewhere else and send power through Bluetooth?" Needless to say, we all laughed.

    But really, now that I think of it, I should have told them that it would have worked if they'd implemented RFC 3251 [ietf.org] over 802.11! ;)

  • by nurb432 ( 527695 ) on Sunday April 27, 2003 @11:54AM (#5819382) Homepage Journal
    Nice to see the wheel re-invented, again.
  • to beam electricity without the need for unsightly pylons and overhead cables

    all overhead cables have been removed from many european cities years ago. the secret? underground cables. yeah, i know it costs money but not having to worry about power outages in storms (never mind surges when lightning strikes nearby), having the wires and poles removed is sure worth it. no brain frying either.
    • That would be really nice, but I imagine it would be a hassle in earthquake-prone areas.

      Imagine having to tear up the streets to fix broken power lines in addition to all the other damage control after a major quake.
      • Yes, but the streets will already be torn up by the quake. Also, they'll have to repair water/sewer/gas anyway, which all run underground, so the digging will be done regardless of where the power lines are.
  • by anthony_dipierro ( 543308 ) on Sunday April 27, 2003 @12:03PM (#5819416) Journal
    C'mon, Sim City has had this for years...
  • When I was in like fourth grade, I thought up an idea about wireless power. My friends and I schemed up a plan to use a wireless power distribution system to run automobiles. There would be a wireless power node at various points on the power lines in the city, and each one would direct power to cars nearby. The owner of the car would never have to gas the car up, and would just get a bill based on the amount of power his car drew. I even used the terms "microwave" and "electric car" even though this was li
  • we could bea little bit more accurate.

    It's wireless power transmission, yes.. not "wireless electricity". Wireless electricity is like, lightning, electric sparks, or electron beams....

    This is microwave power transmission.

  • Wrong direction (Score:2, Insightful)

    by Alcoyotl ( 157542 )
    What we need is not another way to get energy from power plants to towns and houses but small clean power generators in every buiding.
    Then again, the oil lobby blocked every innovation for cars, so this is not gonna happen soon.
    (And that comment was NOT a flamebait, just my opinion)

  • Tesla (Score:2, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Coward
    Tesla would be proud, but baffled they weren't doing it his way. I still like the stories of Tesla scaring the shit out of his neighbors by creating simulated earthquakes and lightening storms for miles around... one of the few reasons I'd love to have visited the 1800's for a short while.

    BTW folks - all microwaves aren't bad. Just the resonant frequencies of water molecules that are bad news. Filter those out and anything that might produce them by multiplication and life is pretty safe. Well at least
  • by retro128 ( 318602 ) on Sunday April 27, 2003 @12:13PM (#5819478)
    Well, the server appears to be down, but it a most Slashdot way, I'd like to comment on the article without even having read it!
    Nikola Tesla himself was known for doing stuff like this [braincourse.com]. But I don't believe the 95% efficiency for a second...You can't even get that though wires if they are long enough.

    Practically, "Wireless Electricity" already exists; it's called radio. The difference is only a very tiny current is induced in an antenna, whereas these folks in the article are trying to power a light bulb.

    The biggest problem with trying to do this is that electromagnetic waves drop off very, very rapidly as they propagate through space, and to counter this you need a huge generator. If you had such a thing you'd need to direct beam it to this village and you can bet the stream would barbeque everything in its path. Also, radio waves are not lasers...It is very difficult to control where they go, so you could expect a certain spread as it propagated form the power source. I would bet that a lot of the people in the source, destination, and everything in between would be exposed to these amounts of insane EM radiation constantly, and that can't be good.

    In short, my take on it is that while this has a certain coolness factor, it's way too impractical. If they don't want to mess with running wire, they should just construct a fuel cell generator and leave them with a hell of a lot of hydrogen. And they can do this now, not wait three years.
  • by FrostedWheat ( 172733 ) on Sunday April 27, 2003 @12:13PM (#5819479)
    That much power focused into a beam will probably be enough to boil water. It'll be interesting to see if this has any side-effects during a rain shower!

    Maybe we'll have the 'beams of steam' going across the various valleys in France!
  • ... but one day, he was proven correct [alexchiu.com].

    Nikola invented wireless energy. This is Not News, but it is a Good Thing©.
  • by Hanzie ( 16075 ) on Sunday April 27, 2003 @12:29PM (#5819559)
    login with slashdot/slashdot

    Then post.

    This isn't a case of general broadcast, it's point to point.

    They also claim that, since it's different frequencies, that they "won't bake the residents." Though I'm not sure about it, I'd think anybody who actually is in the middle of such a project and says such a thing probably know's what they're talking about. (Though obviously spectacular exceptions exist.)

    In any case, if they start baking residents, passersby or wildlife, I assume lawsuits will fly. I also assume that somebody has consulted tech-aware lawyers already regarding this issue.
    • Yes, there is good reason to believe that this "won't bake the residents." Microwave ovens emit microwave radiation at a frequency that causes water molecules to resonate. The radiation causes vibration, which builds up thermal energy. Being over 3/4 water, you would also be cooked in a microwave. A piece of paper, however, would not be heated nearly as much, since it contains no water.

      The resonance effect is the reason that there are separate settings for "defrost" and for "cook." The frequency neede
  • physic lessons (Score:2, Interesting)

    by hermes4293 ( 248618 )
    i always thought the energy of an electromagnetic wave decreases with the cube of the distance...
  • by OwnerOfWhinyCat ( 654476 ) * on Sunday April 27, 2003 @12:35PM (#5819593)
    Infrastructure is an evolutionary process. It's the fact that we have cheaply available power that sets up the conditions by which we produce cool power hungry gadgets. It's the fact that it can be delivered in large amperages to densely packed locations that makes it so everyone in your apartment building can watch a separate big-screen T.V. at the same time.

    Thus, it is completely unfair to knock this technology because it will never be a match for a burly copper cable.

    Imagine what it's like to live in a remote village that has no power available. First off, this almost always means no phones, land-line or cell. It also usually means that the families that are better off run their generators during certain hours of the day, producing noise and fumes, and enough power to get some work done, but they don't run them day and night. Four hours a day at a few hundred watts of power and no phones would significantly change most of our lives.

    The most important thing microwave power could provide would be to enable a low power cell-site to give continuous operation at low cost. Unobstructed, 10 five watt channels would provide good communication for a few thousand people if used frugally (the way everybody did when roaming was $2 per minute). The people in the town could set up cellular fixed station adapters and wire their homes with copper and have a cheap phone in every room. With rechargeable batteries that charging up during the generator "power hours" they could have hours worth of night of phone calls to everyone else in the village, and more importantly to people outside the village with which they might want to do business. Even people without generator access could buy a pocket phone with two batteries and leave one at the neighbor's house charging while the other stayed in their pocket to give them emergency contact capability.

    In regularly overcast areas (I live in one) the day often has enough light to see by, but not enough to read by. Just one 30 halogen bulb produces better reading light than any oil lamp I've ever used. Without light to read by, or TV of course, nights around here could get pretty boring, and homework pretty hard to do.

    Since this is "a remote village" that means it's likely there are some uninhabited outskirts between it and the nearest big city. So between your microwave distribution points there wouldn't have to be any people at all. They could also aim the beam such that overspill wasn't directed toward the town.

    I don't like the idea of radiation burns any more than the next person, but if done correctly there would be little danger. This could be a tremendous asset to people living off the grid, and to tower-climbing children wanting to roast hot dogs. :)

  • Microwaves for the electricity are targeted via antennas and reflectors at a "rectenna" (from the words rectifier and antenna), which absorbs the microwave energy from the beam and converts it back into DC power with diodes. - so where do you put a rectenna exactly and how efficient is it at receiving electricity? Is it high voltage and/or currency? A high currency rectenna........ wait a moment!
  • Kind of gives "don't cross the beam" a new meaning...
  • by coupland ( 160334 ) * <dchaseNO@SPAMhotmail.com> on Sunday April 27, 2003 @12:53PM (#5819680) Journal
    What the hell is "the technology used in microwave ovens?!?" Buttons? Electricity? Light bulbs? Microwaves?? Do journalists even read their own inane statements? Hey, I just harnessed the technology used in keyboards to send an e-mail, it's revolutionary...
  • By positioning the microwave beam across a migration route, the people in the village get roast duck for free.

    RMN
    ~~~
  • Does anybody remember the microwave energy plant in Simcity 2000 and when the microwaves became dealigned wreaking havok on neighboring buildings? What if that happened here, random microwavings, a new hazard to living.
  • This is basically a terrestrial version of beamed power [spaceref.com] from Solar Power Satallites, a concept that's been studied since 1968.

    The microwave systems that SSI [ssi.org] have studied are basically like a UHF tv station transmitter (sans Weird Al).

    Birds don't cook, people don't mutate, airplanes won't crash from this. Since this is a line of sight system, the range is probably less than 20 miles. Even so, it will make a terrific demo that proves the practicality of powering cities from SPS.

  • by fygment ( 444210 ) on Sunday April 27, 2003 @02:03PM (#5820006)
    Besides wondering what marketing genius came up with that name, just what kind of efficiency can you get with this principle. The losses are at:

    a) conversion from AC to DC
    b) conversion for transmission
    c) losses due to Tx antenna efficiency
    d) losses during transmission incl. energy lost toasting birds and folk getting in the way of the Tx beam
    e) losses due to Rx antenna efficiency
    f) losses during rectification to DC
    g) losses during conversion to work (here light), more if you go to storage (battery) and back again.

    Those add up pretty darn quick. Plus power received varies as an inverse square law of the distance from the transmitting site. Not very efficient. Seems like strictly a niche application.
    • Try 90+% (Score:3, Insightful)

      by apsmith ( 17989 )
      Efficiencies of over 60% have been shown in DC-DC transmission of power (look up microwave power beaming in google some time). Your "a" and "f" are the same issue, and the "rectenna" also adds "e" into the same process, so whatever loss there is in "rectennafying" it's one step. I've read 90+% is possible there; don't know if it's ever been done in practice. Your "g" is there no matter what you do with the power at the end, so that's a wash. "d" one hopes will be kept low - in any case, losses with traditio

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