London :Scientists have developed a tiny, wireless temperature sensor which is powered by the radio waves that are part of the device’s own network.
This means that the sensor needs not even a single wire, nor a battery that would have to be replaced, researchers said.
The arrival of such sensors is an important development on route towards smart buildings, for instance. But the applications are many and various, they said.
The smart buildings of the future will be full of sensors that will respond to the residents’ every need, and will be as sustainable as possible. Like heating and lighting that only switches on when someone is in the room.
That is only possible if these sensors are wireless and need no batteries, otherwise in a large building you would have to change the batteries every day, researchers said.
Hao Gao, researcher at the Eindhoven University of Technology (TU/e) in the Netherlands, developed the sensor that measures just 2 square millimetres and weights a mere 1.6 milligrammes, equivalent to a grain of sand.
The current version of the sensor has a range of 2.5 centimetres; the researchers expect to extend this to a meter within a year, and ultimately to 5 meters.
The sensor has a specially developed router, with an antenna that sends radio waves to the sensors to power them. Since this energy transfer is accurately targeted at the sensor, the router consumes very little electricity.
And the sensors themselves are made such that their energy consumption is extremely low. The sensor also operates beneath a layer of paint, plaster or concrete.
This makes the sensor easy to incorporate in buildings, for instance by ‘painting’ it onto the wall with the latex, Peter Baltus, TU/e professor of wireless technology, said.
The sensor contains an antenna that captures the energy from the router. The sensor stores that energy and, once there is enough, the sensor switches on, measures the temperature and sends a signal to the router.
This signal has a slightly distinctive frequency, depending on the temperature measured. The router can deduce the temperature from this distinctive frequency.
The same technology enables other wireless sensors to be made, for example to measure movement, light and humidity. The application areas are enormous, Baltus said, ranging from payment systems and wireless identification to smart buildings and industrial production systems.
PTI