October 10, 2023
The next generation of wireless systems may be built on microjet-cooled glass
Wireless communications like cellphone and Wi-Fi networks are everywhere in the 21st century, continually increasing in size, speed, and complexity. But energy efficiency isn’t keeping up. By some estimates, the wireless ecosystem as a whole may be responsible for 23% of all global CO2 emissions by 2030.
Purdue University researchers may have a solution. They are collaborating on a $1.5 million grant from the National Science Foundation (NSF) on heterogenous integration of the high-power electronics involved, built on a glass substrate. They are also developing novel cooling methods to decrease the energy consumed by these next-generation wireless networks.