Informative Report Archive

Solar film that recharges your phone battery

Posted March 5, 2013 By David

A recently developed transparent film that costs only one euro to make, may bring an end to the feared dead-battery.

Wysips, a start-up based in Aix-en-Provence, southern France, has developed a photovoltaic film that can be built seamlessly into a mobile phone screen and deliver the joy of life to a flat battery.

At the world’s biggest mobile fair in Barcelona, Spain, the gadget was luring interest from handset manufacturers and its inventors said they hoped the first mobiles equipped with the Wysips film will be in stores by the end of this year.

Wysips chief executive Ludovic Deblois showed off a prototype of a smartphone equipped with the film at the Mobile World Congress. By just shining a torch on its screen, the mobile’s battery icon showed that it had started to recharge.

“With 10 minutes in the sun you will be able to communicate for two minutes. To recharge completely you will have to expose it for six hours, so our technology is not necessarily for a full recharge but rather for an energy boost for specific applications,” Deblois said.

“For example, for security if you have to make an emergency call. So if you arrive at the airport and you have your boarding pass on the mobile you can’t have a telephone that runs out of battery so you can just put it in the light and recharge it.”

Similarly, the film can get mobile phone users out of a fix when batteries go flat just when the time comes to pay a restaurant bill, or buy a train ticket. Read the remainder of this entry »

Be the first to comment
English: This composite shows the Cassiopeia A...

This composite shows the Cassiopeia A supernova remnant

Cosmic rays are fast-moving particles that constantly pummel our planet come from the explosion of supernovae.

 

Protons make up 90 per cent of these rays that pelt Earth’s atmosphere and were discovered a century ago by the Austrian-born physicist Victor Franz Hess.

Scientists had suggested two possibilities for the origins of these protons – supernovae explosions within our Milky Way galaxy or strong jets of energy from black holes elsewhere in the universe.

The recent consensus among scientists has pointed to supernovae remnants as the source, but this remained unproven, said Stefan Funk, astrophysicist at Stanford University and a co-author of the new findings.

The report was presented at the annual conference of the American Association for the Advancement of Science in Boston and also appeared in Friday’s issue of the journal Science.

“In the last century we’ve learned a lot about cosmic rays as they arrive here,” Funk said in a statement announcing the findings.

“We’ve even had strong suspicions about the source of their acceleration, but we haven’t had unambiguous evidence to back them up until recently.”

Using NASA’s Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope, researchers over the course of four years analysed data from two supernova remnants thousands of light years away and found the proof they were looking for.

“For the first time we were able to detect the smoking gun feature of the accelerated protons,” Funk told reporters.

“We are talking about the most gigantic explosions in our galaxy and they give energy to the tiniest things we know.”

The supernova remnants that led to the discovery are known as IC 443 and W44 and are located 5000 and 9500 light years away, according to NASA.

The researchers found that shock waves from the supernovas accelerated protons to nearly the speed of light, turning them into cosmic rays, said the statement.

“When these energetic protons collided with static protons in gas or dust they gave rise to gamma rays with distinctive signatures, giving scientists the smoking-gun evidence they needed to finally verify the cosmic-ray nurseries,” it said.

Still, as man spends more time in the higher atmosphere, questions remain.

“While we have demonstrated that supernova remnants accelerate cosmic rays, the next step will be to determine exactly how they do it, and also up to what energies they can do so,” Funk said.

In addition, he noted “there are suggestions that cosmic rays have provided early mutations that make life possible” and provide condensation droplets that create clouds.

Be the first to comment

Silicon chips have reached their limit when it comes to speed and ability to store an electrical charge, say scientists.

But RMIT University and CSIRO researchers have developed a new flat material, made up of layers of crystal known as ‘Molybdenum Oxides’, which has properties that encourage the free flow of electrons at ultra-high speeds.

They say this would boost speed of communication and capacitance, the ability to store an electrical charge, using the same size chips as are used today.

The researchers say they adapted the ground-breaking material graphene to create a new conductive nanomaterial.

Graphene was created in 2004, and was touted as the two dimensional material of the future, winning its UK inventors a Nobel Prize in 2010.

However, some of its physical properties prevent it from being used for high-speed electronics.

The CSIRO’s Serge Zhuiykov said the new nanomaterial was made up of layered sheets similar to the graphite layers that make up the core of a pencil.

The importance of the new discovery is how quickly electrons which conduct electricity are able to flow through the new material, he said.

“We will be able to transfer data more quickly and the functionality of devices will improve,” he said.

The only thing stopping that from happening will be the ability of the software developers to write new programs which make the most of these speeds.

“At the moment it is beyond our imagination where this new material could be applied, but it could be employed to create thinner mobile phones, new types of flexible electronics or lighter laptops,” he said.

It could also be used for data storage.

RMIT’s Professor Kourosh Kalantar-zadeh said if electrons could pass through a structure quicker, devices that transfer data at much higher speeds could be made smaller.

“This breakthrough lays the foundation for a new electronics revolution and we look forward to exploring its potential,” Prof Kalantar-zadeh said.

1 Comment. Join the Conversation

Three brazen thieves stole some where around $1.5 million worth of Apple iPad minis from a JFK airport cargo building, according to reports.

The thieves allegedly used one of the airports forklifts to hoist two pallets of iPads into a semi, leaving a few other pallets behind after being confronted by an airport worker.

The FBI investigated whether this might have been an inside job and have since arrested JFK worker Renel Rene Richardson who allegedly assisted in the heist and acted as a lookout while two others loaded the pallets onto the semi.

According to court papers, Richardson allegedly made suspicious inquiries to co-workers about the iPad mini shipment and where forklifts could be found and as result this led to his arrest by the FBI.

After the FBI arrested Richardson, he agreed to go along with detectives as they searched Long Island for the truck containing the stolen iPads. However, as of this morning, dozens of brand new iPad minis showed up for sale on Craigslist on Long Island. The FBI has yet to comment on the situation and whether or not any more arrests have been made.

Apple iPhones and iPads have increasingly become targets of thieves, who have robbed stores and individuals most frequently.

Be the first to comment
%d bloggers like this: