Posted on 04/06/2021 11:33:29 AM PDT by Red Badger
Picture the street outside your home. Now erase the power lines. Imagine interstate highways without the unsightly cable towers that dot the expansive United States landscape. This could be the wireless future of energy if a partnership between New Zealand’s government and a startup called Emrod works out—and it all dates back to the wildest dreams of Nikola Tesla.
Wireless electricity sounds like science fiction, but the technology is already realized and primed for a utility-scale case study. And in this first-of-its-kind pilot program, Powerco—New Zealand’s second-largest electricity distributor—will test Emrod technology beginning in 2021.
“IT SOUNDS FUTURISTIC AND FANTASTIC BUT HAS BEEN AN ITERATIVE PROCESS SINCE TESLA.”
The companies plan to deploy the prototype wireless energy infrastructure across a 130-foot expanse. To make it possible, Emrod uses rectifying antennas, a.k.a. “rectennas,” that pass microwaves of electricity from one waypoint to the next: a solution well-suited to New Zealand’s mountainous terrain. Specialized square elements are mounted on intervening poles to act as pass-through points that keep the electricity humming along, and a broader surface area “catches” the entire wave, so to speak.
“We’ve developed a technology for long-range wireless power transmission,” says Emrod founder Greg Kushnir. “The technology itself has been around for quite a while. It sounds futuristic and fantastic but has been an iterative process since Tesla.”
The link to Nikola Tesla, Kushnir admits, is more of an imaginative, feel-good tale than a true genealogy. Tesla considered wireless power in the 1890s, as he labored over his breakthrough “Tesla coil” transformer circuit that generated alternating current electricity, but he couldn’t prove that he could control a beam of electricity across long distances. “The sheer fact that he could imagine it is remarkable, but the sort of technology he was looking to apply wouldn’t have worked,” Kushnir says.
Emrod, by contrast, can keep the beam of electricity tight and focused with two technologies. The first is transmission-related: Small radio elements and single wave patterns create a collimated beam, which means that the rays are aligned in parallel, and will not spread much as they propagate. Second, Emrod uses engineered metamaterials with tiny patterns that effectively interact with those radio waves.
This content is imported from YouTube. You may be able to find the same content in another format, or you may be able to find more information, at their web site.
Emrod’s wireless antennas are a medium, like a cable, meaning that their task is to simply connect an electrical supply to customers. Kushnir envisions placing Emrod technology on difficult terrain that links with the sunniest, windiest, or most hydro-friendly points on Earth as these often rural places have the widest gap in electrification.
By eliminating the need for long stretches of traditional copper wiring, Emrod says it can bring power to these regions, which can’t afford the kind of infrastructure that supports the power grid. There could be positive environmental ramifications to this, as well, since many sites that don’t have access to electricity end up leaning on diesel generators for energy.
There are even opportunities to support offshore wind and solar farms, Kushnir says, because the current friction point for those forms of renewable energy come down to the cost of transmission. In the Cook Strait—which connects the North and South Islands of New Zealand—offshore wind farms require expensive underwater cables, for instance.
At this point, Kushnir has enough corporate buy-in to take the next regulatory steps, and begin propagating Emrod’s technology. The real challenge, he says, will be to reassure and educate the public.
“We anticipate a lot of pushback similar to the stuff we’ve been seeing with 5G,” he says. “People push back on additional radiation around them, and it’s completely understandable.” But luckily, he says, Emrod’s controlled beam sheds no radiation. It’s not a “spray” pattern like a cell phone antenna.
So if all goes well during the New Zealand pilot program in early 2021, wireless energy could quite literally be on the horizon in the U.S., too. As for when? That’s anybody’s guess.
IMAGE COURTESY OF EMROD
To wirelessly conduct energy, Emrod generates electricity in a tight and focused beam in the non-ionizing Industrial, Scientific, and Medical band of the electromagnetic spectrum—the portion of the radio band that corresponds to Wi-Fi and Bluetooth frequencies.
From there, a transmitting antenna sends the power through various relay points to a “rectenna” that can safely transport the waves in the same frequency range as the microwave oven in your home. Meanwhile, tiny lasers monitor the rectennas to sense any obstructions between relay points. That way, there is no outside radiation, and no birds are harmed in this transfer of power.
—Courtney Linder
He tried, but just didn’t have the technology, time or money for the era................
Yeah, bullshit.
“Fried pigeon anyone?”
Frequencies? Power levels?
I found an absolutely gorgeous ten acre lot that was wonderfully located. It was covered with mature trees. It was amazingly cheap. I couldn’t believe my luck. It was a short drive from town and everything around it was developing like mad. I was chomping at the bit. My realtor said, “Okay, calm down. This has been on the market for a full ten years. The price has dropped every few months. It has major power lines running down the center.” I said, “I don’t care. There’s a couple of beautiful spots where you can’t even see the power lines.” She said, “People won’t buy it from you. You can build your dream home, but you won’t even be able to get your costs out of it.” Why? People are afraid of the power levels hurting their health. Now, I cut my teeth as a radio engineer. We are bombarded by radiation from the sun our entire life. We can’t see it or hear it, but it’s there. I have measured it. There is no evidence that “radiation” from power lines does anything to our health. None. But, common sense prevailed. (Okay, it took some beating, but I finally agreed. And, that lot is vacant today and not on the market.)
Now, about microwaves. Yeah, you can be injured or killed by them. I worked for a company called EMR, which, back in the fifties (long before me) had built a mobile radar. Two techs were out in the field with it. They were arguing over a girl. While one of them sat some distance away eating lunch, the other turned the antenna on him and cranked up the power. The guy eating lunch died. Now that is an unusual circumstance. Typically, microwave towers are high up and the “lobes” (oblong areas that are on the sides and behind the antenna which receive some amount of power that is not being sent downrange) are set so they won’t hurt people. But, believe me, long term exposure to high frequency, high power is bad for your health. (It’s the same way you cook food in a microwave oven.)
I don’t see this catching on. Maybe in really remote areas, but it will likely kill wildlife. (Of course, dead eagles are okay if you’re running a windmill. But harm a single feather and it’s a $15,000 find and a possible several years in jail in Florida.)
Retired AT&T engineer built this site years ago. Great pics & info.
long-lines.net
this reminds me of the plot of “A quiet earth” which was set in New Zealand oddly enough.
Climb Aboard the Green Nude Eel ... Get Rich Quick ... then Run Like Hell.
"EMROD" eh? Sounds like "ENRON" kinda sorta.
E=MC squared. You can’t change the physics (at least at this point). Energy available is equal to energy produced - less transmission and other losses.
If it could work against Godzilla, it might work here https://youtu.be/8uaSS_xgsz8?t=67
I haven’t even read it and call bull$hiet, until they transmit the power as well, not some control signals.
Good thought. Electromagnetic force varies as the square of the distance between the objects in question.
And I mean big power!! Otherwise, they are cluttering up the environment with more crap!
And that's coming from a 35-year-experience RF engineer with 7 patents and a published IEEE paper in the field.
“Emrod”, eh? Probably a real pain in the ass.
And what is the energy loss from this.🤔
Wireless electricity... blow up the balloon, tie it off, rub it on your shirt...
Someone is politically connected and some politicians are getting rich off thkz. This is nothing more than a boondoggle.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.