Intel's Power Play: Charging Gizmos in the Air

The chip giant's researchers are developing sensors powered by radio waves, cell phones with built-in solar cells and processors that can adjust power use quickly.

Imagine a day when cell phones or other mobile devices can charge themselves with free energy converted from radio waves that are abundant wherever there are cell phone and radio towers.

That's one of the futuristic scenarios Intel's researchers are aiming for as the company develop sensors or other technologies that can grab all kinds of free energy sources from around us, such as radio waves (a type of electromagnetic energy) and the sun.

"Wouldn't it be nice if you can go indefinitely without charging the battery if you can scavenge free energy from the environment," said Justin Rattner, Intel's chief technology officer Friday.

Intel, based in Santa Clara, Calif., makes most of the microprocessors and WiFi chips used by personal computers in the world today. Rattner, who is based at Intel's Oregon's campus, stopped by San Francisco to give a talk about the chip giant's eco-friendly research efforts (see his presentation).

So is the company getting into the sensor business? Not any time soon. Intel has a formidable research arm that investigates a slew of subjects, from designing chips with novel materials to ethnographic studies. The company employs anthropologists to look at how consumers behave and interact with technology.

Even if the research isn't directly related to engineering better chips, it does aim at promoting computer use. And not just personal computers or servers, but all electronic devices that rely on processors to work. By doing so, Intel hopes to sell more chips to many of these devices.

Energy efficiency has been weighing heavily on Intel's mind ever since it realized, earlier this deca de, that it needed to radically change how it designs chips to make them do more with less energy. Otherwise, those chips would end up sucking up lots of power and risk overheating.

To help put its energy-efficiency research into a marketable slogan, Intel has come up with "hybrid power architecture." The research, then, looks at a combined use of alternative energy sources and efficiency power delivery and management technologies to cut reduce electricity use in our increasingly digitized world.

Here is Rattner's outline of the eco-friendly research: