Author Topic: The uBeam FAQ  (Read 641551 times)

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Offline Fungus

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Re: The uBeam FAQ
« Reply #925 on: July 30, 2017, 02:30:06 pm »
Being fat nullifies the advantage of being blonde.

She wasn't as massive when she started this. I guess some of that venture capital money went on fine foods.

(I use "massive" in the scientific sense of having the property of mass, I'm not saying she's a plumper yet).
 

Offline StillTrying

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Re: The uBeam FAQ
« Reply #926 on: July 30, 2017, 03:13:03 pm »
Anyway, I agree, let's get back to the technology.

OK.
From what we've seen I don't think they have an awful lot, considering the time and $$$$$$.

I don't think there's any feedback in the calibration between the image detecting the white rectangle, and the 'beam forming', I get the impression that if the camera or TX array were off by a few degrees 'the beam' would be sent to the wrong place.
.  That took much longer than I thought it would.
 

Offline PaulReynolds

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Re: The uBeam FAQ
« Reply #927 on: July 30, 2017, 07:42:28 pm »
Being fat nullifies the advantage of being blonde.

She wasn't as massive when she started this. I guess some of that venture capital money went on fine foods.

(I use "massive" in the scientific sense of having the property of mass, I'm not saying she's a plumper yet).

Can we keep it off this and on the tech/business side of things? There's just no need for this, and you're letting uBeam dictate the narrative. It's also wrong, even in jest.
 

Offline PaulReynolds

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Re: The uBeam FAQ
« Reply #928 on: July 30, 2017, 07:48:03 pm »
Anyway, I agree, let's get back to the technology.

OK.
From what we've seen I don't think they have an awful lot, considering the time and $$$$$$.

I don't think there's any feedback in the calibration between the image detecting the white rectangle, and the 'beam forming', I get the impression that if the camera or TX array were off by a few degrees 'the beam' would be sent to the wrong place.

Maybe we should ask their beam forming expert about that? Not sure who that is, can't find one on LinkedIn.

OK, maybe their transducer expert? Damn can't find them either.

ASIC guru? OK, no-one standing out.

Mass production? Nope.

Safety/regulatory? Nada.

Are they all consultants, or employed but keeping it on the down low? Or there's just no-one?

Still no jobs posted on their hiring page, guess we'll know they have money when the ads start appearing.

https://ubeam-inc.workable.com/

 
 

Offline StillTrying

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Re: The uBeam FAQ
« Reply #929 on: July 30, 2017, 08:44:37 pm »
These things were supposed to be on the shop shelves by late 2011. I think it's game over myself. :-/O
.  That took much longer than I thought it would.
 

Offline Dubbie

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Re: The uBeam FAQ
« Reply #930 on: July 30, 2017, 08:46:29 pm »
Being fat nullifies the advantage of being blonde.

Comments like this make you look like a cruel ignorant dick.

There are plenty of legitimate reasons to critique uBeam. Stick to those.

R
 

Offline Howardlong

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Re: The uBeam FAQ
« Reply #931 on: July 30, 2017, 08:59:57 pm »
Where were they intending to use the ASIC(s)? I assume just in the handset receiver. I remember thinking they were trying to run before they could walk by jumping straight in with ASICs as soon as they'd received funding. The same applies to the production and operations call centre appointment, that must've been a busy role.
 

Offline brainwash

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Re: The uBeam FAQ
« Reply #932 on: July 30, 2017, 09:17:20 pm »
I think the project has been debunked in every possible way. But assuming it would be feasible, could you take e-car batteries to a rock concert and charge them? Or just buy a couple of pairs of these devices and hook one up in your house and take another one to the concert - then you can power your home remotely! It would be a bit difficult for the receiver to track you but you can activate the Google location service. There's a new idea for those indiegogo campaign videos!

On a more serious note, my 2.4GHz band is overwhelmed now, I can count at least 20 routers at all times, probably at least 100 devices, and that's just on WiFi. If I turn my Bluetooth on I can see a dozen Samsung TVs at the top of the list, haven't scrolled down yet. Unfortunately, a lot of my 802.11 devices are stuck on 2.4GHz. Really, any new wireless innovation has to think this contention through.
I set up a 433Mhz receiver to feed decoded signals into my rPi, but I shut it down as soon as the database got to a few hundred megabytes (one week). Wonder how many remote sockets and thermostats I can control just by replaying those signals.
 
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Offline Howardlong

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Re: The uBeam FAQ
« Reply #933 on: July 30, 2017, 09:39:13 pm »
The only way I've reliably defeated 2.4GHz noise floor increase in-spectrum is to increase the number of APs and let devices roam between them. I use the same SSID and access on all my APs for this purpose.

This takes us back to the interesting "r^2" comment in the recent twitter spat (#913). Perry was correct in my view, to point out 1/r^2, and Matthew Ocko made quite the dick of himself trying to explain it away as Twitter-speak, a bit of a "covfefe" moment. Maybe it is Twitter-speak, but I don't see any other reference to it. Either way, clearly this spat wasn't his finest hour, not least by trying to erase it ever happened.
 

Offline coppice

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Re: The uBeam FAQ
« Reply #934 on: July 30, 2017, 10:11:45 pm »
This takes us back to the interesting "r^2" comment in the recent twitter spat (#913). Perry was correct in my view, to point out 1/r^2, and Matthew Ocko made quite the dick of himself trying to explain it away as Twitter-speak, a bit of a "covfefe" moment. Maybe it is Twitter-speak, but I don't see any other reference to it. Either way, clearly this spat wasn't his finest hour, not least by trying to erase it ever happened.
Engineers generally refer to r-squared loses, not 1/r^2. What Perry said makes no sense. She said the r-squared issue doesn't matter with a tightly focussed beam, but r-squared loses apply regardless of the beam width.
 

Offline StillTrying

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Re: The uBeam FAQ
« Reply #935 on: July 30, 2017, 10:27:21 pm »
Perry was correct in my view, to point out 1/r^2,

She might have been correct in saying 1/r^2 doesn't count much for tightly focused beams, but she didn't say that uBeen were producing tightly focused beams.
Reminds me of the 2 or 3 last videos with the 2 prototypes, it was her that described all the conclusions, and told the reporter what he had seen, just like a magician.

And I don't think any of the 'steerable beams' we saw in the videos were outside the normal beam of a US transducer, and as they're quite directional it's a problem.
« Last Edit: July 31, 2017, 03:03:16 am by StillTrying »
.  That took much longer than I thought it would.
 

Offline EEVblog

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Re: The uBeam FAQ
« Reply #936 on: July 30, 2017, 10:51:21 pm »
Perry was correct in my view, to point out 1/r^2,
She might have been correct in saying 1/r^2 doesn't count much for tightly focused beams, but she didn't say that uBeen were producing tightly focused beams.
Reminds me of the 2 or 3 last videos with the 2 prototypes, it was her that described all the conclusions, and told the reported what he had seen, just like a magician.
And I don't think any of the 'steerable beams' we saw in the videos were outside the normal beam of a US transducer, and as they're quite directional it's a problem.

Let's just assume for kicks that have a perfectly steerable beam (they do have some beam forming in the huge basement model, done by the custom ASIC) that is 100% focused.
You still have the show-stopping problems of efficiency, cost, safety, and receiver angle alignment in practical usage.
Is there any product idea that's possible "in principle" and yet has so many show-stopping problems?
Even Hyperloop has fewer show-stoppers, and that's saying something.
 

Offline brainwash

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Re: The uBeam FAQ
« Reply #937 on: July 30, 2017, 11:35:40 pm »
As a theoretical question, I've seen some papers where the ultrasonic power transfer efficiency at 20kHz is 70-90%, but I cannot find any data on the efficiency of a phased array setup, even for radio. I can instinctively think that there is some power loss in the side lobes as well as some loss because there isn't an infinite number of radiators, but what's the ballpark we are talking about? Assuming a 16x16 or maybe 64x64 array, I doubt anything consumer-related can go higher than this.
 

Offline EEVblog

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Re: The uBeam FAQ
« Reply #938 on: July 30, 2017, 11:45:14 pm »
As a theoretical question, I've seen some papers where the ultrasonic power transfer efficiency at 20kHz is 70-90%

Through what medium and what range?
There is a paper that shows about 3dB loss (i.e half power, 50%) per meter in air. Worse at higher levels due to saturation.
 

Offline Fungus

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Re: The uBeam FAQ
« Reply #939 on: July 30, 2017, 11:53:04 pm »
As a theoretical question, I've seen some papers where the ultrasonic power transfer efficiency at 20kHz is 70-90%

Sure, but:
* How much power were they transmitting?
* Over what distance?
* How big were the transducers?
 

Offline coppice

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Re: The uBeam FAQ
« Reply #940 on: July 30, 2017, 11:59:06 pm »
As a theoretical question, I've seen some papers where the ultrasonic power transfer efficiency at 20kHz is 70-90%
That sounds high for for the efficiency transferring into air. You can get pretty high efficiency transferring into liquids, but getting high efficiency into gases is more of a challenge. Loses within liquids are generally much lower, too.
 

Offline amspire

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Re: The uBeam FAQ
« Reply #941 on: July 31, 2017, 12:04:34 am »
Assuming a 16x16 or maybe 64x64 array, I doubt anything consumer-related can go higher than this.
UBeam have been working towards a way to make arrays with thousands of elements "economical" but it hardly makes sense talking about what is economical in a consumer environment when they do not seem to have any technology that is practical in a consumer environment. This has always been a concept that needs the phone manufacturers lining up to integrate into their products and given that UBeam are now talking about maintaining the charge rather then boosting the charge, I cannot see why any manufacturer would even start to look at it.
 

Offline brainwash

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Re: The uBeam FAQ
« Reply #942 on: July 31, 2017, 12:17:00 am »
I don't know where I got the 70-90% figures from, it was a table inside a scientific paper, I think they were determining the efficiency for cleaning (so liquid medium). Does not matter much, I'm sure there are plenty of studies on that.
My question was about the phased array efficiency, I can't find any data on that, much less on ultrasonic ones (used in medical equipment). Just as a ballpark, for example: 90% at 90 degrees (head-on) in vacuum, 70% at 45 degrees, with an array of 64x64. Celsius degrees, of course (joking).
 

Offline EEVblog

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Re: The uBeam FAQ
« Reply #943 on: July 31, 2017, 01:11:41 am »
Assuming a 16x16 or maybe 64x64 array, I doubt anything consumer-related can go higher than this.
UBeam have been working towards a way to make arrays with thousands of elements "economical" but it hardly makes sense talking about what is economical in a consumer environment when they do not seem to have any technology that is practical in a consumer environment. This has always been a concept that needs the phone manufacturers lining up to integrate into their products and given that UBeam are now talking about maintaining the charge rather then boosting the charge, I cannot see why any manufacturer would even start to look at it.

They won't, their engineers will laugh their arses off.
 

Offline StillTrying

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Re: The uBeam FAQ
« Reply #944 on: July 31, 2017, 02:56:25 am »
My question was about the phased array efficiency, I can't find any data on that, much less on ultrasonic ones

Including the word radar helps, there's quite a few old pdfs out there, which don't help much, there's nothing I've found on ultrasonic arrays efficiency, probably because it's a stupid way to try to transfer leccy power!

I still think uBeen's efficiency is about the same as it's practicability, < 0.1%
« Last Edit: July 31, 2017, 03:04:26 am by StillTrying »
.  That took much longer than I thought it would.
 

Offline Howardlong

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Re: The uBeam FAQ
« Reply #945 on: July 31, 2017, 02:50:46 pm »
This takes us back to the interesting "r^2" comment in the recent twitter spat (#913). Perry was correct in my view, to point out 1/r^2, and Matthew Ocko made quite the dick of himself trying to explain it away as Twitter-speak, a bit of a "covfefe" moment. Maybe it is Twitter-speak, but I don't see any other reference to it. Either way, clearly this spat wasn't his finest hour, not least by trying to erase it ever happened.
Engineers generally refer to r-squared loses, not 1/r^2. What Perry said makes no sense. She said the r-squared issue doesn't matter with a tightly focussed beam, but r-squared loses apply regardless of the beam width.

Ocko didn't say "R^2 losses", he said "R^2 math" and then said it was Twitter-speak. Had he said "R^2 losses" I'd agree.

On the point of the tightly focussed beam, in the far field, I agree 1/r^2 applies, but considering the aperture size, this is still in the Fresnel near field.
 

Offline coppice

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Re: The uBeam FAQ
« Reply #946 on: July 31, 2017, 07:11:00 pm »
This takes us back to the interesting "r^2" comment in the recent twitter spat (#913). Perry was correct in my view, to point out 1/r^2, and Matthew Ocko made quite the dick of himself trying to explain it away as Twitter-speak, a bit of a "covfefe" moment. Maybe it is Twitter-speak, but I don't see any other reference to it. Either way, clearly this spat wasn't his finest hour, not least by trying to erase it ever happened.
Engineers generally refer to r-squared loses, not 1/r^2. What Perry said makes no sense. She said the r-squared issue doesn't matter with a tightly focussed beam, but r-squared loses apply regardless of the beam width.

Ocko didn't say "R^2 losses", he said "R^2 math" and then said it was Twitter-speak. Had he said "R^2 losses" I'd agree.

On the point of the tightly focussed beam, in the far field, I agree 1/r^2 applies, but considering the aperture size, this is still in the Fresnel near field.
I don't think we know the frequency yet, but it has to be at least 40 or 50kHz. Let's say 50kHz. That means the wavelength is <7mm. How many wavelengths of near field do you think you will get? This is not a large emitter trying to produce a plane wavefront, where only the ends of the wavefront lead to divergence. Its an array trying to produce the tightest beam it can. It will diverge in an r^2 manner from a couple of wavelengths out.
 

Offline HackedFridgeMagnet

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Re: The uBeam FAQ
« Reply #947 on: July 31, 2017, 11:11:30 pm »
But it is not a point source. covfefe.
 

Offline Howardlong

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Re: The uBeam FAQ
« Reply #948 on: August 01, 2017, 07:29:33 am »
This takes us back to the interesting "r^2" comment in the recent twitter spat (#913). Perry was correct in my view, to point out 1/r^2, and Matthew Ocko made quite the dick of himself trying to explain it away as Twitter-speak, a bit of a "covfefe" moment. Maybe it is Twitter-speak, but I don't see any other reference to it. Either way, clearly this spat wasn't his finest hour, not least by trying to erase it ever happened.
Engineers generally refer to r-squared loses, not 1/r^2. What Perry said makes no sense. She said the r-squared issue doesn't matter with a tightly focussed beam, but r-squared loses apply regardless of the beam width.

Ocko didn't say "R^2 losses", he said "R^2 math" and then said it was Twitter-speak. Had he said "R^2 losses" I'd agree.

On the point of the tightly focussed beam, in the far field, I agree 1/r^2 applies, but considering the aperture size, this is still in the Fresnel near field.
I don't think we know the frequency yet, but it has to be at least 40 or 50kHz. Let's say 50kHz. That means the wavelength is <7mm. How many wavelengths of near field do you think you will get? This is not a large emitter trying to produce a plane wavefront, where only the ends of the wavefront lead to divergence. Its an array trying to produce the tightest beam it can. It will diverge in an r^2 manner from a couple of wavelengths out.

You're assuming a single point source, this is a phased array, so there are interference effects dependent on both wavelength, as you say, but also the aperture size.

Consider the complex interference patterns of the ~ 1,000 element radiator, when phased appropriately there are going to be some very hot spots where the wavefronts interfere constructively by design, and where they converge it will also depend on the distance from the radiator.

Although there is a transition region where both near field and far field effects are considered relevant, the near field is typically defined as the Fraunhofer distance, 2*D^2/L where D is the largest dimension of the radiator and L is the wavelength.

Given your frequency, and a maximum linear aperture dimension of, say, 0.5m:

c=340 (speed of sound m/s)
D=0.5 (maximum aperture dimension)
f=50000 (frequency)
L=0.0068 (wavelength)

gives the extent of the near field as 73.5m, so I'd suggest for this application's use cases, and in the demonstrations given, we're well inside the near field where we should be considering interference effects well ahead of far field concerns.

Edit: My experience is in RF, it looks like acoustics refer the the near field differently, i.e. D^2/(4L). This gives a near field distance of 9.2m, so the use cases are still well within the near field with the amended definition (from https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phased_array_ultrasonics)
« Last Edit: August 01, 2017, 08:02:42 am by Howardlong »
 

Offline EEVblog

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Re: The uBeam FAQ
« Reply #949 on: August 01, 2017, 09:14:28 am »
I don't think we know the frequency yet, but it has to be at least 40 or 50kHz.

We do know:
https://techcrunch.com/2015/11/07/wireless-power-charger/

Quote
45kHz to 75kHz with an output of 145dB to 155dB (or 316 W/m2 – 3kW/m2)
 


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