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Portable Power
Technology Analyst: Rosamund Gee
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Viewpoints
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Viewpoints
  2008
June - Spotlight on Micro Fuel-Cell Developments at Neah Power
Recent Developments: Power Air Targets Battery Recharger Market
May - Konarka Demonstrates Ink-Jet–Printed Solar Cells
Recent Developments: Splashpower is for Sale
April - Energy Harvesting for Portable Power: Some Recent Developments
March - Portable Power: Batteries Fight Back
February - Recent Developments: M2E Promotes Kinetic Energy for Military Applications • Scientists Create Silicon Nanowire Battery • Developers Showcase Micro-Fuel-Cell Advances at CES
 
  2007
Dec/Jan - 2007: The Year in Review
Look for These Developments in 2008
November - Recent Developments: Samsung Unveils Water-Powered Micro Fuel Cell • U.S. DOT Proposes Ruling to Allow Micro Fuel Cells on Planes • Scientists Progress Plastic Battery Development
October - Experts Question Lithium-ion Batteries' Inherent Safety
Recent Developments: Two New Players Join the Wireless-Charging Arena
September - Recent Developments: Scientists Develop Carbon-Nanotube–Based Flexible Battery • Fulton Innovation Is a New Name in Wireless Charging for Portable Devices • Sony Develops Novel Bio Battery
Announcement: Explorer Technology Area Virtual Environments Becomes Virtual Worlds
August - Solid-State Thin-Film Microbatteries: An Overview of Recent Developments
July - Recent Developments: New Separator Materials Aid Portable-Battery Performance and Safety • Researchers Demonstrate Novel Nanogenerator Technology • 3M Settles Patent Complaint with Matsushita
New Technology Area: User Interfaces
June - Recent Developments: Manufacturers Advance Solar-Powered Cell-Phone Technology • Matsushita Battery Seeks to Improve Lithium-Ion Battery Safety • Akermin Confirms Additional Venture-Capital Funding for Biofuel Cell Development
May - Update on Micro-Fuel-Cell Development for Portable Applications
April - Recent Developments: Two-Year Project Supports Microgenerator Development for Implanted Medical Devices • EaglePicher Develops Miniature Medical Battery • Scientists Develop Virus-Based Self-Assembling Batteries
March - Recent Developments: Scientists Progress Microbattery Development • Manufacturers Develop Li-ion Technology for Power-Tool Applications • South Korea Targets Advanced Battery Markets
February - Recent Developments in Wireless Power Transmission
 
  1996–2006 Viewpoints archive  >>



About This Technology

Despite battery technology's lack of glamour or excitement, it has maintained its position as the predominant power source in portable and handheld applications for several decades. But now a new generation of wireless devices and portable-entertainment products is making power demands that even the more advanced battery chemistries—NiMH and Li-ion—are finding difficult to meet. Reductions in operating voltage and low-power processors have done little to offset the problem as device designers continue to enhance their products with extra features and capabilities. In addition to coping with increased functionality—such as color displays, speech-recognition capability, embedded MP3 and video players, and cameras—batteries are also having to cope with significant increases in voice and data traffic, as location-based services, electronic banking, and Internet access increasingly become standard offerings in handheld devices. At an even smaller scale, the development of miniature remote-sensing and microelectromechanical systems is also creating a need for miniature energy sources that can power microsize devices independently or become an integral part of devices through the use of thin-film–fabrication technologies.

Batteries are currently the most common energy source for portable applications, although considerable research effort and funding are centering on alternative power solutions that will solve the portable energy needs of the future. This research is investigating the potential of a range of energy sources, including kinetic, solar, vibration, electrochemical, thermal, and biological technologies and spawning the development of new energy devices that include micro fuel cells, microengines, and biofuel cells. In addition to assessing how conventional batteries can remain competitive in powering future portable and miniature devices, this Technology Map discusses the commercial potential of alternative technologies.

If manufacturers overcome the barriers to commercialization, alternative portable energy sources will provide strong competition to conventional primary and secondary batteries in OEM and retail markets for powering consumer-electronics devices. And as manufacturers increasingly integrate power sources into devices at manufacture, markets for replacement batteries will also decline. At stake is a multibillion-dollar global market for portable power that offers explosive growth prospects as portable devices continue to take hold.



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