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Hardware

EnOcean Wireless Sensors Don't Need Batteries (Video) 46

'The EnOcean technology is an energy harvesting wireless technology used primarily in building automation systems; but is also applied to other applications in industry, transportation, logistics and smart homes,' says Wikipedia. There's also a Siemans spinoff company called EnOcean, and today's video is an interview with its president, Jim O'Callaghan. But EnOcean technology is the real star here. The idea is that energy-efficient sensors can be powered by energy harvesting, i.e. drawing energy from their surroundings, including such low-level sources as light, temperature changes, and pressure, which can be the pressure of your finger on a switch or even changes in barometric pressure. The EnOcean Alliance has a professionally-produced video that describes their technology and notes that self-powered wireless sensors not only save energy but save miles of wire between sensor nodes and controllers, which means it's possible to install more sensors sensing more parameters than in the past. (Alternate Video Link)

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EnOcean Wireless Sensors Don't Need Batteries (Video)

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  • Siemans? (Score:2, Informative)

    by Anonymous Coward

    ITYM Siemens

  • by sycodon ( 149926 ) on Monday January 12, 2015 @05:32PM (#48797071)

    First you're drawing energy from your surroundings, including such low-level sources as light, temperature changes and the next thing you know, you're sucking the energy out of a Star Ship's Warp Coils.

    Slippery Slope if I ever saw one.

  • The Hue lighting PoC was pretty lame, not a lot of use cases there. I'd rather just use the thing that is always in my pocket (and has a battery) . Nothing else seemed very close to being ready for market. Solar is obviously the most common "ambient" power source. That booth just looks very fluffy to me.
    • The Hue lighting PoC was pretty lame, not a lot of use cases there. I'd rather just use the thing that is always in my pocket (and has a battery) .

      The vibrating dildo?

  • So I can power the sensors for my smart home that doesn't need switches, by the pressure of my finger on a switch? I'll take a dozen!

  • The idea is that energy-efficient sensors can be powered by energy harvesting, i.e. drawing energy from their surroundings, including such low-level sources as light, temperature changes, and pressure, which can be the pressure of your finger on a switch or even changes in barometric pressure.

    I live in my parents' cold, dark basement you insensitive clods!

    • Sounds like you need a mat that utilizes the flex of your chair as you lift pizza rolls to your mouth to generate electricity. ;)

  • ... but it had me thinking the product was maritime sensors that harvest energy from the oceans.
    There's indeed a number of potential energy sources in the ocean, that is sun, wind, waves and water constantly pushing you in various directions or even living and dead organic matter.

    I believe we badly need thousands upon thousands of sensors floating in the oceans, because they're poorly known and we have many severe changes going on (collapse and blooms of species, warming of layers, acidification), we need t

  • by k2backhoe ( 1092067 ) on Tuesday January 13, 2015 @01:22AM (#48800103)
    I have an 80+ year old Atmos torsion pendulum mantel clock. It never needs winding, it harvests energy from atmospheric pressure changes (or temperature changes). Air pressure in a sealed can will run the clock for a week on just a 2F degree swing in ambient temperature.

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