This Super-Tiny Windmill Could Someday Charge Your Phone
Researchers at the University of Texas at Arlington have come up with a way to build a nickel alloy windmill so small, 10 of them could be mounted on a grain of rice. And if all goes as planned, the little windmill could end up in a case that charges up your smartphone.
UT Arlington's Smitha Rao and J.-C. Chiao designed the windmill, which at its broadest is just 1.8mm wide. Built from nickel alloy for rigidity, the little fan is self-assembled using wafer-scale semiconductor electroplating principles and a technique the team likens to origami. Rao and Chiao have partnered with WinMEMS Technologies Co., a Taiwanese company researching ways to build micro electro-mechanical systems, to bring the baby windmill to reality.
"Imagine that they can be cheaply made on the surfaces of portable
electronics," Chiao said, "so you can place them on a sleeve for your smart
phone. When the phone is out of battery power, all you need to do is to put on
the sleeve, wave the phone in the air for a few minutes and you can use the
phone again." Maybe she could design a case that aims the windmills below the
user's chin, so you could
charge up your phone simply by talking on it