
TL;DR
This paper explores sustainable energy experience design by developing batteryless electronic prototypes that use minimal critical minerals, aiming to inform more sustainable mainstream device manufacturing.
Contribution
It introduces the concept of energy experience and demonstrates prototypes that operate sustainably with limited critical mineral use, advancing eco-friendly device design.
Findings
Prototypes successfully operate with batteryless, sustainable energy sources.
Devices demonstrate extremely long-lasting performance.
Design approaches suggest pathways for mainstream sustainable electronics.
Abstract
The material footprint of information and communications technology (ICT) systems is both significant and growing, inspiring a variety of conversations around sustainability and climate justice. In part this effort has been catalysed by past scholarship and analysis from the LIMITS community. This paper examines energy storage systems for computing, particularly batteries -- which are discarded at the rate of 15 billion a year worldwide. The International Energy Agency (IEA) is now referring to the energy transition toward low carbon systems as a critical mineral problem, and countries are speaking openly of 'mineral security' in policy documents. In this paper I 1) present a definition for energy experience and what this means for the design and making of devices, interactions and experiences. I also 2) explore a series of electronics device prototypes converted to run from batteryless…
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Taxonomy
TopicsBuilding Energy and Comfort Optimization · Innovative Human-Technology Interaction · Design Education and Practice
