As the Internet of Things expands, so does the demand for sensors to collect data and energy to power those sensors. A team of researchers at MIT are working on a solution for these problems using low cost solar cells mounted on thin radio-frequency identification (RFID) tags. The cells can be used to power sensors using ambient indoor or outdoor light without having to recharge batteries.
In the TechXplore post, Sai Nithin Kantareddy, a Ph.D. student in the MIT Auto-ID Laboratory explains, "In the future, there could be billions of sensors all around us. With that scale, you'll need a lot of batteries that you'll have to recharge constantly. But what if you could self-power them using the ambient light? You could deploy them and forget them for months or years at a time...This work is basically building enhanced RFID tags using energy harvesters for a range of applications."
The post TechXplore continues, “Depending on certain factors in their environment, such as moisture and heat, the sensors can be left inside or outside for months or, potentially, years at a time before they degrade enough to require replacement. That can be valuable for any application requiring long-term sensing, indoors and outdoors, including tracking cargo in supply chains, monitoring soil, and monitoring the energy used by equipment in buildings and homes.”
The prospect of low cost, solar powered sensors seems promising. However, the reliability of such equipment will depend on its ability to withstand the environments that it is deployed in. This will surely require environmental testing...and that is where we can help!
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