Device transmits radio waves with almost no power – without violating the laws of physics

January 25, 2023

By Joshua R. Smith, University of Washington and Zerina Kapetanovic, Stanford University

This experimental setup shows an ultra-low-power wireless communications device that could one day be used in tiny remote sensors.
Zerina Kapetanovic, CC BY-ND

A new ultra-low-power method of communication at first glance seems to violate the laws of physics. It is possible to wirelessly transmit information simply by opening and closing a switch that connects a resistor to an antenna. No need to send power to the antenna.

Our system, combined with techniques for harvesting energy from the environment, could lead to all manner of devices that transmit data, including tiny sensors and implanted medical devices, without needing batteries or other power sources. These include sensors for smart agriculture, electronics implanted in the body that never need battery changes, better contactless credit cards and maybe even new ways for satellites to communicate.

Apart from the energy needed to flip the switch, no other energy is needed to transmit the information. In our case, the switch is a transistor, an electrically controlled switch with no moving parts that consumes a minuscule amount of power.

In the simplest form of ordinary radio, a switch connects and disconnects a strong electrical signal source – perhaps an oscillator that produces a sine wave fluctuating 2 billion times per second – to the transmit antenna. When the signal source is connected, the antenna produces a radio wave, denoting a 1. When the switch is disconnected, there is no radio wave, indicating a 0.


Free Reports:

Get our Weekly Commitment of Traders Reports - See where the biggest traders (Hedge Funds and Commercial Hedgers) are positioned in the futures markets on a weekly basis.





Download Our Metatrader 4 Indicators – Put Our Free MetaTrader 4 Custom Indicators on your charts when you join our Weekly Newsletter





What we showed is that a powered signal source is not needed. Instead, random thermal noise, present in all electrically conductive materials because of the heat-driven motion of electrons, can take the place of the signal driving the antenna.

No free lunch

We are electrical engineers who research wireless systems. During the peer review of our paper about this research, published recently in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, reviewers asked us to explain why the method did not violate the second law of thermodynamics, the main law of physics that explains why perpetual motion machines are not possible.

Perpetual motion machines are theoretical machines that can work indefinitely without requiring energy from any external source. The reviewers worried that if it were possible to send and receive information with no powered components, and with both the transmitter and receiver at the same temperature, that would mean that you could create a perpetual motion machine. Because this is impossible, it would imply that there was something wrong with our work or our understanding of it.

Electrons that naturally move around inside a room-temperature resistor affect electrons in a connected antenna, which causes the antenna to generate radio waves. Connecting and disconnecting the antenna produces the ones and zeros of a binary signal.
Zerina Kapetanovic, CC BY-ND

One way the second law can be stated is that heat will flow spontaneously only from hotter objects to colder objects. The wireless signals from our transmitter transport heat. If there were a spontaneous flow of signal from the transmitter to the receiver in the absence of a temperature difference between the two, you could harvest that flow to get free energy, in violation of the second law.

The resolution of this seeming paradox is that the receiver in our system is powered and acts like a refrigerator. The signal-carrying electrons on the receive side are effectively kept cold by the powered amplifier, similar to how a refrigerator keeps its interior cold by continuously pumping heat out. The transmitter consumes almost no power, but the receiver consumes substantial power, up to 2 watts. This is similar to receivers in other ultra-low-power communications systems. Nearly all of the power consumption happens at a base station that does not have constraints on energy use.

A simpler approach

Many researchers worldwide have been exploring related passive communication methods, known as backscatter. A backscatter data transmitter looks very similar to our data transmitter device. The difference is that in a backscatter communication system, in addition to the data transmitter and the data receiver, there is a third component that generates a radio wave. The switching performed by the data transmitter has the effect of reflecting that radio wave, which is then picked up at the receiver.

An example of backscatter unpowered wireless communications.

A backscatter device has the same energy efficiency as our system, but the backscatter setup is much more complex, since a signal-generating component is needed. However, our system has lower data rate and range than either backscatter radios or conventional radios.

What’s next

One area for future work is to improve our system’s data rate and range, and to test it in applications such as implanted devices. For implanted devices, an advantage of our new method is that there is no need to expose the patient to a strong external radio signal, which can cause tissue heating. Even more exciting, we believe that related ideas could enable other new forms of communication in which other natural signal sources, such as thermal noise from biological tissue or other electronic components, can be modulated.

Finally, this work may lead to new connections between the study of heat (thermodynamics) and the study of communication (information theory). These fields are often viewed as analogous, but this work suggests some more literal connections between them.

About the Author:

Joshua R. Smith, Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering and of Computer Science and Engineering, University of Washington and Zerina Kapetanovic, Acting Assistant Professor of Electrical Engineering, Stanford University

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

InvestMacro

Share
Published by
InvestMacro

Recent Posts

Countries spend huge sums on fossil fuel subsidies – why they’re so hard to eliminate

By Bruce Huber, University of Notre Dame  Fossil fuels are the leading driver of climate…

14 hours ago

Profit-taking is observed on stock indices. The data on wages in Australia haven’t met expectations

By JustMarkets At the end of Tuesday, the Dow Jones Index (US30) fell by 0.29%.…

16 hours ago

USD/JPY at a Three-Month Peak: No One Opposes the US Dollar

By RoboForex Analytical Department  The USD/JPY currency pair has climbed to a three-month high of…

16 hours ago

Can Chinese Tech earnings offer relief for Chinese stock indexes?

By ForexTime  CHINAH, CN50, HK50 falling on fears of heightened US-China trade tensions US president-elect Trump…

16 hours ago

Companies are buying up cheap carbon offsets − data suggest it’s more about greenwashing than helping the climate

By Sehoon Kim, University of Florida  Carbon offsets have become big business as more companies…

1 day ago

Bitcoin hits an all-time high above $88,000. Oil remains under pressure

By JustMarkets At the end of Monday, the Dow Jones Index (US30) rose by 0.69%.…

2 days ago

This website uses cookies.