Researchers are a step closer to harvesting renewable or ambient energy from mobile phone base stations to power battery-operated wireless sensors used in industries including health and agriculture.
A student at the University of California, San Diego, has developed a single-semiconductor IC that can record biopotentials—tiny voltage signals that inhabit the human skin’s surface—to be used for ...
WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. - Purdue University innovators are working on inventions to use micro-chip technology in implantable devices and other wearable products such as smart watches to improve ...
Advancements in low-power and reliable wireless communications, together with improvements in sensor and energy harvesting technologies is making it more practical and more efficient to use this type ...
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