Energy Challenges for Smart Sensor Dust

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Forbes Magazine reports computers as small as particles of dust are emerging from science fiction. When that happens, vast change is going to happen in a flash, they say. These nano-wireless devices will be capable of sensing their surroundings and reporting back. However there will be no space for batteries inside them. Therefore, a number of energy challenges remain.

Exciting Ideas, Possible Solutions for Energy Challenges

energy challenges
Robot Caught Coding: Steve Jurvetson: CC 2.0

Science already has the technology to make computers the size of rice grains. However, the big issue is how to get the power to them. An IOT battery manufacturer claims a chip consuming “1 million times less energy than an iPhone”.

Research is ongoing to harness energy from chemical reactions, light, magnetism, temperature, and vibration. Elsewhere, radio-frequency identification RFID resolves energy challenges by getting power from base stations. Whereas passive Wi-Fi uses backscatter to transmit power and so we already may have a partial solution.

Possible Applications for These Next Gen Computers

Assuming we solved the remaining energy challenges, smart sensor dust could be a key to the age of robots. Smart dust in our brains could track neural activity. Perhaps someday it could relay commands to external devices.

energy challenges
Field of Corn: Paranoid: Public Domain

On the more mundane level, scientists envisage smart machines on factory floors calling for maintenance. There’s also a possibility smart sensor dust would report diseases breaking out in crops. If we had them in wearables – and in our cars, cities could manage people and traffic flows better. However, should we, could we control the proliferation of these nano devices?

Technology matures rapidly. Smartphones changed human culture while we slept to the extent we talk less in restaurants. It took a disruption at Gatwick Airport for governments to start wondering how to control drones. We may need to think carefully, before we unleash a network of smart sensor dust onto an unsuspecting population.

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About Author

I tripped over a shrinking bank balance and fell into the writing gig unintentionally. This was after I escaped the corporate world and searched in vain for ways to become rich on the internet by doing nothing. Despite the fact that writing is no recipe for wealth, I rather enjoy it. I will not deny I am obsessed with it when I have the time. I live in Margate on the Kwazulu-Natal south coast of South Africa. I work from home where I ponder on the future of the planet, and what lies beyond in the great hereafter. Sometimes I step out of my computer into the silent riverine forests, and empty golden beaches for which the area is renowned. Richard

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