UNBELIEVABLE:- Charge Your Smartphone By Shouting At It –
See How It Works
Charge your phone by SHOUTING at it: Gadget converts sound waves from speech into five volts of
energy for your mobile.
As the class Governor of my
department at Yaba college Of technology, It seems phone batteries always die
at the same moment you need to make an important call like calling a Lecturer ,
before class or after class.
But while shouting at your mobile in
frustration might seem pointless, a new gadget could soon mean your screams
won’t be in vain.
Researchers in London have created a
new technology that uses sound, such as chants at a football ground or chatter
in a coffee shop, to charge up mobile phones.
Their prototype device, which is
about the size of a mobile phone, uses zinc oxide to convert vibrations caused
by sound into electricity.
The invention was inspired by
previous research at Queen Mary University of London (QMUL), which found
playing pop and rock music improved the performance of solar cells.
This was because the sound
vibrations triggered the movement of material in the solar cell that caused it
to improve efficiency by up to 40 per cent.
Developing this research further,
Nokia worked with the QMUL team to create an energy-harvesting prototype that
could be used to charge a mobile phone using everyday background noise.
Nokia worked with the QMUL team to
create an energy-harvesting prototype that could be used to charge a mobile
phone using everyday background noise. Pictured here is the zinc oxide used in
the device.
The team used the key properties of
zinc oxide, a material that when squashed or stretched creates a voltage by
converting energy from motion into electrical energy, in the form of nanorods.
The nanorods can be coated onto
various surfaces in different locations making the energy harvesting versatile.
When this surface is squashed or
stretched, the nanorods then generate a high voltage.
The nanorods respond to vibration
and movement created by everyday sound, such as our voices.
Electrical contacts on both sides of
the rods are then used to harvest the voltage to charge a phone.
In order to make it possible to
produce these nanogenerators at scale, the scientists found innovative ways to
cut costs in the production process.
Firstly, they developed a process
whereby they could spray on the nanorod chemicals – almost like nanorod
graffiti – to cover a plastic sheet in a layer of zinc oxide.
When put into a mixture of chemicals
and heated to just 90°C, the nanorods grew all over the surface of the sheet.
Secondly, gold is traditionally used
as an electrical contact, but the team were able to produce a method of using
cheap and cheerful aluminium foil instead.
The final device is the same size as
a Nokia Lumia 925 and generates five volts, which is enough to charge a phone.
‘Being able to keep mobile devices
working for longer, or do away with batteries completely by tapping into the
stray energy that is all around us is an exciting concept,’ said Dr Joe Briscoe
from QMUL
0 comments:
Post a Comment