Researcher has developed, at a cost of less than one dollar, a wireless light switch that runs without batteries, can be installed anywhere on a wall and could reduce the cost of wiring a house by …::A U of A engineering researcher has developed a wireless light switch that could reduce the cost of wiring a house by as much as 50 per cent.
Enocean has been making battery free wireless light switches for almost 15 years. I’ve personally used them for about 8 years and love them. They’re a lot more expensive then the $1 quote in the article but still cheaper than an electrician. They work with a strike to a piezoelectric element to make energy and transmit the signal.
AbouBenAdhem@lemmy.world 11 months ago
No explanation of how it works, but I’m guessing it slides an RFID chip in or out of a Faraday cage.
ColeSloth@discuss.tchncs.de 11 months ago
It sort of explains it, if you already know how RF charging works. It’s still pretty new tech, but has been around for a bit.
“RF wireless charging is a type of uncoupled wireless charging in which an antenna embedded in an electronic device can pick up low level radio frequency waves from external sources and convert the waves’ energy to direct current (DC) voltage.”
So knowing that and the article referencing about wireless light switches already being a thing, but being battery powered, it seems that it’s a standard wireless light switch that has just been modified with an rf wireless charging receiver that will charge a small battery or some capacitors to run the light switch.
IMO, until you’re using rf to power more than just light switches, you’re wasting a lot more electricity than it’s worth, compared to changing out batteries in your light switches once every like 5 years. If RF gets standardized completely and it starts helping to power a whole mess of things like your smart watches, phones, air tags, clocks, etc then it will be pretty sweet.
agitatedpotato@lemmy.world 11 months ago
Didn’t the soviet union have radio bugs that worked like that? No power of their own and hard to detect but if you blast them with RF they can use some of that energy to turn into small very weak signal transmitters. One of the culprits of ‘Havana sickness’ if I remember.
AbouBenAdhem@lemmy.world 11 months ago
I can’t find that quote in the article—or anything that definitively indicates they’re talking about RF power rather than RFID signals (other than saying the transmitters “power up” all the switches, which could just be sloppy terminology.)
jonne@infosec.pub 11 months ago
Isn’t this ambient RF that’s there anyway, like your WiFi network and stuff like that? I don’t see any harm in harnessing it for low power applications like those switches, sensors, etc.