A prototype shown at Mobile World Congress 2015 incorporated
solar-power technology into a Smartphone’s touch screen to make it accessible
even after the battery has died.
At Mobile World Congress 2015 in Barcelona this week,
Kyocera is showing a prototype that turns one of the modern Smartphone’s
biggest battery life liabilities into an asset – a Smartphone
that incorporates solar power technology into the touch screen.
According to a Smithsonian Magazine report, Kyocera
developed the technology in partnership with Sun Partner Technologies and
installed it on its Torque Smartphone prototype, which was designed for rugged
outdoor use.
At less than 0.5 millimeters in thickness and as much as 90%
transparency, the screen technology could fit any of today's popular smart
phones without inhibiting their users, Sun Partner Technologies said in a
press release. The component that captures sunlight – called Wisps Crystal –
can be installed just below the touch screen panel of the Smartphone, so it
doesn't affect the user experience, and feeds the solar energy into the
battery.
While the technology may not be strong enough to replace the
plug-and-charge Smartphone battery, it does mean users could access apps and
information on their phones at least for a brief period after the battery has
completely died. This could prove critical for emergency situations, though it
may be limited to those that occur during the day time.
Sun Partner marketing director Mathieu de Boca told
Smithsonian that the Wisps Crystal technology can currently generate up to 2.5 mill
watts of power per square centimeter in "typical sunlight
conditions," and added that the company aims to reach 4 mill watts by the
end of this year.
At its current capacity, de Boca said 10 minutes of exposure
to sunlight could generate 100 minutes of standby use and about two minutes of
talk time to a Smartphone’s battery, according to the report.
This isn't the first attempt to solve the cell phone battery
issue with solar power. As the Smithsonian report pointed out, Samsung even
tried with a project called Blue Earth in 2009. But the Sun Partner
technology is the first to look to the touch screen, allowing for the device to
be used while it generates power.
Kyocera's Torque Smartphone is a prototype that isn't likely
to make it to market, according to the report. But Sun Partner is still
developing the technology for Smartphone and tablet cases and covers, which
could reach the market soon.
Battery life seems to be the one deficiency that is holding
mobile technology back. I've said in the past that it will stand in
the way of widespread adoption of mobile payments – people are used to their
wallets, and they won't leave the house without them until they can be sure
that their phone won't die and leave them stranded without access to money.
What this project does signify, however, is increasing
interest in approaches to solve the battery life problem through the
environment around the Smartphone, in lieu of technology that improves the
actual batteries that go into the phone. As was shown at CES, wireless Smartphone
charging stations could soon start showing up in cars and at every public
business where a user might need a charge. Solar would make it available
everywhere else.
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