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Wireless Charging

  • Writer: Akshay Maheshwari
    Akshay Maheshwari
  • Feb 4, 2018
  • 2 min read

If there's one great technology rising in the mobile world today, it is wireless charging. Just as the world got bored of using USB's to charge everything and anything (excluding Apple), the next best thing came along. The thing is wireless charging, and I've much to say about it. But first... what is wireless charging?

Frankly, I find wireless charging is far better than using USB cable to charge your gadgets. It might seem that the difference between plugging a cable on your desk into your smartphone and removing it as you leave has the same level of frustration as placing a smartphone on a charging station and picking it up as you leave is minimal; but the difference in comfort, speed, and usability is like night and day.

Wireless charging works on the principle of electromagnetic induction. Coils of wire in the base station (the charging plate) create a magnetic field as the current passes through. This field can induce an electrical current in an adjacent coil of wire without actually touching it. If this wire is part of a battery charging circuit, then you have wireless charging.

It's not as efficient as a direct cable connection between the batter and - wireless charging is around 60%-70% efficient and it is still recommend that booting a device from cold is done through a wired connection. But for day-to-day use, just lining up the coils and letting electromagnetism do the rest is the simple value proposition at the heart of wireless charging.

It's worth noting that the lithium-ion chemistry used in smartphone batteries happily copes with having short bursts of energy to charge them up - which is exactly what wireless charging can provide as you lift your smartphone up from the charging pad and replace it throughout the day.

As with any technology, there are a number of systems looking to gain dominance and become 'the standard'. For wireless charging that pretty much means the Qi standard globally (which is driven by the Wireless

Power Consortium), although US consumers will likely have come across the Power Matters Alliance who are behind the Power Mat technology. Naturally the standards aren't compatible (the induction coils operate at different frequencies for starters).

From portable blue-tooth speakers and smartwatches, to a range of Android and Windows Phone powered smartphones and tablets, wireless charging is now part of my checklist of 'things to have on a new device'. It's not yet at the deal-breaker status, but if I have the choice of two equally capable products, the one with Qi charging is going to be the one that wins out.

Why? Because it simply is magical. Just put your hardware down and when you need it, pick it up and it's fully charged.


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