The PowerMaze Electrical Distribution System
PowerMaze is a device that allows two-pole electrical contact to be established between two touching objects. The two-pole contact is established regardless of their relative position and orientation, as long as they touch with a contact area greater than a pre-defined minimum.
The light fitting shown above has no wires going to it. It is picking up its electrical power from the pattern on the ceiling, to which it is magnetically attached. It can be placed anywhere on the ceiling in any orientation. Multiple lights can be handled too.
Half the pattern is connected to one pole of the supply (either AC or DC) and the other half is connected to the other pole. The pattern here is based on a Hilbert curve (the white area). This curve fills the whole plane and, because it is a single continuous line, must have two sides. These two sides can form the two poles of the supply (red and blue).
Other
fractal and non-fractal patterns can be used as well. The only
requirement is to distribute the two poles of the supply over the
surface roughly evenly with a guaranteed minimum gap (the width of
the white line in the example) between them.

The
second object (the light in the instance above) has a set of sprung
contact pins arranged randomly in its base. These are represented by
the black circles. The diameter of the pins (d) must be less than
the minimum gap between the poles of the supply (the width of the
white line). Other than that the pins can be any size and in any
position, as long as there are enough of them. The pins are
connected by diodes to two power rails as shown. These are the power
output. They always have the same polarity regardless of how the two
halves of the system are made to touch because of the diodes.

This picture shows the internals of the light fitting. The diodes are sandwiched between the two PCBs, and the
sprung pins project from one side of the bottom PCB. The magnet that holds the device to the ceiling is also shown. The large squares on the graph paper are 10mm across.
The genesis of this idea was a requirement to make an electric
road - a road from which an electric car could pick up power whilst
still being able to steer at liberty. For this and similar
applications the diode contact set would make rolling contact (as
wheels) with the polarized set, which would be the road. Clearly it
would not be an economic proposition to make a significant proportion
of a real road from, say, copper. But existing roads are made from
tar. Conducting polymers are now available, and these use
petrochemicals as the feedstock for their synthesis, so it may prove
economic to construct such a road using them rather than metals as the
conductors. There are also now semi-conducting polymers from
which the diode set could be made, in the form of a tyre. There are
clear safety implications with this electric road, especially if it is
run at any significant voltage; consider people stepping onto it, or
rain... A more structured environment might prove suitable,
though. Examples are automatically-guided vehicles in factories, or
the small mobile robots that are widely used in research into
co-operative behaviour..
However, the first applications of the idea are likely to be at a
smaller scale. Indeed, one of the simplest ways to mass produce both
the diode and the polarized contact patterns would be to use standard
PCB etching or, at an even smaller scale, chip-manufacturing photo-lithography.
It would be possible to transfer both data and power simultaneously
from the polarized set to the diode set by modulating the supply in
addition to a fixed D.C. offset voltage. The device connected to the
diode set would then separate the modulated component as the data and
use the D.C. voltage as its power source. In fact it would be
possible to move full-duplex data in both directions simultaneously by
having the diode set modulate its power consumption from
the polarized set too.
There are all sorts of circumstances in which it is advantageous to
be able to make bipolar electric contact (sometimes only for a short
time) between two objects that may not be well-aligned. Examples are
swipe and smart cards, bar-code readers, simple credit and debit
transactions, the recharging of electrical and electronic devices such
as mobile phones, cordless drills, and so on. All of these could be
achieved, and in many cases made simpler, using PowerMaze.
Alternatively, imagine a glove with a set of the contacts embedded in
the index fingertip, or a stylus with a set of the contacts at the
end. Just tapping this on an active area (the other contacts) of some
object would be enough to transfer data between the two. Applications
of this include stock control, library book issues and returns, and
user authentication for things like terminal access and door locks.
As seen, the polarized contacts can be embedded in a
ceiling (or maybe a wall), and surrounded or backed by a polymer
insulator impregnated with ferrite powder to make it magnetic. The
diode set can be assembled together with magnets to clamp it to the
wall or ceiling, and used to power spotlights (or anything else).
These can be attached anywhere on the ceiling (or wall) at any
orientation to allow light distribution to be changed in a very
versatile way for things like art galleries and exhibitions. Power
cords (probably helically wound) could also be run from the magnetic
diode set and used to power more or less any device that would at
present use a combined mains plug and transformer/rectifier (such as a
mobile phone charger).
It would be possible to make the surface of a desk the polarized contacts,
and to have a diode contact set on the back of a laptop computer or PDA.
Placing the computer or PDA on the desk would both recharge its
batteries and connect it to a network, all via the same contacts,
without any need for wireless communication such as Bluetooth. This
might form the basis of a useful public service in areas such as
airport lounges, or on aircraft or trains. Many such environments
need to facilitate network access whilst minimizing RF interference
and the use of radio links (especially aircraft in flight, of course).
PowerMaze is OpenSource technology; you are free to use it as long as you acknowledge its creator, Adrian
Bowyer.
Applications
Licence