A consortium of eight companies has launched an initiative to develop a
wireless power standard aimed at driving development and convenience in
electronics charging.
The drive was announced at the first
Wireless
Power Consortium conference at the Hong Kong Science Park yesterday by the
consortium's eight members: ConvenientPower, Fulton Innovation, Logitech,
National Semiconductor, Philips, Sanyo, Shenzhen Sang Fei Consumer
Communications and Texas Instruments.
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The group said that some wire-free and wireless power transfer technologies
exist today, but that current charging technology prevents different brands of
power sources from charging the same portable device, or different portable
devices from being charged by a common power source.
"This is a crucial moment in the development of wireless power," said Menno
Treffers, senior director of standardisation at Philips, and chairman of the
Wireless Power Consortium.
"This consortium enables every company interested in developing wireless
power to contribute to the convergence of the technology into a single standard
that consumers can rely on for compatibility between products of different
vendors."
Most consumer electronic devices require a different charger, and the
resulting tangle of wires and bulky devices is "ugly, frustrating and
inconvenient to use", the group said.
"Wireless power charging takes away the need for wires and connectors. You
simply drop your mobile phone, game device, electric shaver on the charging
station and the battery is recharged," explained Satoru Nishimura, senior
manager at Sanyo.
Other issues were also raised such as the potential for corrosion and
breakage when using traditional connectors, and the environmental impact of such
a wide variety of chargers.
"The universal wireless power charging standard has the potential to
eliminate the last wire to billions of battery operated devices, thereby
increasing consumer convenience and saving our planet's resources," added Jon
Kiachian, director of the portable mobile devices segment at National
Semiconductor.
The standard relates only to close proximity wireless power transmission and
is based on the principle of magnetic induction, which the group believes to be
the most efficient, safest and reliable method of transfer.
The consortium will first establish a standard for low-power electronic
devices using five watts and below, such as mobile phones, music and video
players, and computer/game accessories, before turning its attention to higher
power portable electronics and electrical equipment.
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