
M2E's physics-level innovations make the Faraday principle up to seven times stronger than previously thought possible.
English chemist and physicist Michael Faraday proved
his principle of electromagnetic induction in 1831 when he demonstrated that
a moving magnet could induce an electrical current in a wire coil. Faraday's
principle was crucial as it laid the foundation for the modern-day generator.
One application of the Faraday principle is the battery-free "shaker" flashlight
whose linear generator is charged every time it's shaken.
M2E applies the same principle but takes it far beyond what Faraday originally envisioned. M2E's patent-pending1 innovations at the physics level deliver three to seven times more power than competing kinetic energy solutions, thereby harvesting sufficient energy from normal daily and mechanical motion to power a wide range of mobile electronic devices.
M2E is also an eco-friendly, cleantech solution that can significantly reduce carbon emissions in larger applications. Depending on usage, it may not need to draw from power grids to recharge itself. It eliminates up to 30 percent of the highly toxic heavy metal contained in typical batteries and—by doubling battery life—cuts in half the number of batteries discarded in landfills.
In doing so, M2E takes the Faraday principle into the 21st century.
1. Six U.S. patents are currently filed and pending.
