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Research aims at cutting electronics power use

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CIOL Bureau
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HELSINKI, FINLAND: Making a cellphone battery last ten times longer is a first target for a large research project that IBM, Infineon and a number of European universities unveiled on Wednesday.

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The new research project, called Steeper, also aims to decrease the energy needs of other electronic devices like TV sets or supercomputers by 10 times when active, and to virtually eliminate power consumption when they are in standby mode.

Short battery life is an increasing problem for consumers needing to charge their phones daily, and for top smartphone vendors - Nokia, Apple and RIM - alike.

"Battery technology has not kept up with the increasing power demands of today's smartphones. As such, power management and efficiency is the biggest challenge facing smartphone vendors in delivering a great, consumer-friendly user experience," said Canalys analyst Tim Shepherd.

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Electronic devices currently account for 15 percent of household electricity consumption, according to the International Energy Agency (IEA), and their energy needs will triple by 2030.

"Our vision is to share this research to enable manufacturers to build the Holy Grail in electronics, a computer that utilizes negligible energy when it's in sleep mode, which we call the zero-watt PC," said project coordinator Adrian Ionescu from Ecole Polytechnique Federale de Lausanne.

Scientists will apply nanotechnology to lower electricity consumption, cost and extend battery life of electronic devices, aiming to at least halve the operating voltage needed by transistors to operate.

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"Improving 1,000-fold performance of a supercomputer means you need 1,000 times more power. You basically need a power plant next to your data centre," said Heike Riel, who leads the nanoscale electronics group at IBM research centre in Zurich.

Data centers such as those run by Google Inc already use more than 1 percent of the world's energy and their demand for power is rising fast with the trend to outsource computing.

Standby power already accounts for about 10 percent of the electricity use in homes and offices, the European Union has estimated.

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