By A Mystery Man Writer
Researchers from MIT’s Microsystems Technology Laboratories have developed a fully flexible device made of the 2-D material molybdenum disulfide (MoS2) that converts energy from Wi-Fi signals into electricity to power electronics, wearables, internet-of-things technologies, and to charge batteries.
Sensors, Free Full-Text
MIT Says a New Gadget Could Use Wi-Fi to Power Your Smartphone
Energy storage technologies: An integrated survey of developments
Power Electronics and Grids - Fraunhofer ISE
Technologies and Applications - eoPortal
Researchers harness 2D magnetic materials for energy-efficient
Two-dimensional MoS2-enabled flexible rectenna for Wi-Fi-band
How New 2D Materials Convert Wi-Fi Signals to Electricity
News Tomas Palacios
News Tomas Palacios
Technologies and Applications - eoPortal
Technologies and Applications - eoPortal
Converting Wi-Fi signals to electricity with new 2-D materials
2D semiconductors for specific electronic applications: from
Monolithic 3D integration of 2D materials-based electronics