Small heart pacemakers and wireless charging
Scientists have found a way to charge non-wires for devices inside the human body.
At present, cardiac arrhythmia and neurotransmitter need large electrical wires through human skin, forcing physicians to limit their size and placement.
A new technology from Stanford University in the United States will help solve this problem. The scientists have created a baby-friendly, heart-rattling, heart-rate rice grinder that can be placed deep inside the human body.
Wireless charging technology has been around for years, but so far scientists have been able to find a safe technology that allows wireless transmission deep inside the body. When fully researched for practical use, this innovation will change the whole of the medical profession: electronic devices will play a role similar to therapeutic drugs, and you can heal ... headaches by put a micro chip into the body.
In a study published today in the National Academy of Sciences, Ada Poon, Stanford's electrical engineering professor, said: "We need to make sure that these devices are as small as possible. It's easy to get them deep inside the body, creating new healing and pain-relieving ways. "With this method of transmitting power, we can minimize the need for endangered medical devices. We are trying to shrink it to a grain of rice, and we can charge it anywhere, including the heart and brain. "
- How does wireless charging work?
- The powerful wireless charging design can fully charge an electric car in 20 minutes
- Wireless charging and things to know
- McDonald's tests the wireless charger at the restaurant
- Already able to charge wireless phones remotely - Breaking the phone industry
- Wireless charging system for bus
- Launches 'super charger' that can charge wirelessly for all devices
- Nokia is developing battery technology without charging?
- Charge the smartphone via ultrasound
- The car itself charging
- Thousands of people with heart disease can be saved by this invention
- Next year, you don't need to plug in the charger but the phone is still full of batteries