New Tech Keeps Your Smartphone Charged for 30 Percent Longer

Invention captures wasted cell phone energy, feeds it back to battery.

Written byPam Frost Gorder-Ohio State University News Office
| 3 min read
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COLUMBUS, Ohio—New technology developed at Ohio State University makes cell phone batteries last up to 30 percent longer on a single charge.

The patented circuitry converts some of the radio signals emanating from a phone into direct current (DC) power, which then charges the phone’s battery. This new technology can be built into a cell phone case, without adding more than a trivial amount of bulk and weight.

Some of the inventors, all engineering researchers at Ohio State, are working with a spin-off company to further develop the technology and will launch a Kickstarter campaign in June for market validation and fund development.

“When we communicate with a cell tower or Wi-Fi router, so much energy goes to waste,” explained Chi-Chih Chen, research associate professor of electrical and computer engineering. “We recycle some of that wasted energy back into the battery.”

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