Neural Interfaces Research News

MIT's tiny 5G receiver could make smart devices last longer and work anywhere

Neural Interfa…
2025-06-20 1 min read

MIT scientists have built a tiny, ultra-efficient 5G receiver that can thrive in noisy wireless environments ideal for smartwatches, wearables, and sensors that need to sip power and still stay reliab...

MIT scientists have built a tiny, ultra-efficient 5G receiver that can thrive in noisy wireless environments ideal for smartwatches, wearables, and sensors that need to sip power and still stay reliably connected. The chip s unique design uses clever capacitor-switch networks and barely a milliwatt of power to block interference 30 times better than typical receivers. This tech could shrink and strengthen the next generation of smart devices.
Source: Neural Interfaces News -- ScienceDaily Word count: 379 words
Published on 2025-06-20 18:49