Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective
Power Matters Alliance
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Remove ads
Power Matters Alliance (PMA) was a global, not-for-profit, industry organization whose mission was to advance a suite of standards and protocols for wireless power transfer for mobile electronic devices (specifically a type of inductive charging that competes with the Qi standard). The organization was merged with Alliance for Wireless Power (A4WP) in 2015 to form AirFuel Alliance.
![]() | This article needs to be updated. (March 2017) |
Remove ads
Founded by Procter & Gamble and Powermat Technologies in March 2012, PMA was networking technology companies in order to guarantee consumers interoperable devices which employed wireless power technology. Marked by the electron "P", PMA interface standard described analog power transfer (inductive and resonant), digital transceiver communication, cloud based power management, and environmental sustainability. The PMA board of directors included representatives from AT&T, Duracell, Starbucks, Powermat Technologies, Flextronics, Federal Communications Commission (FCC), and Energy Star. The membership of the PMA was made up of companies across the mobile device ecosystem, including handset providers, service providers, chipset suppliers, manufacturers, test labs and public establishments.[2]
Remove ads
PMA standard and technology
Summarize
Perspective
The PMA's stated mission was to formulate and advance a suite of interface standards for smart and energy-efficient transfer of wireless power. The PMA was actively publishing a suite of standards based on inductive coupling technology to provide advanced inductive and resonant power. In addition, the PMA sought to add a digital layer providing policy-setting, monitoring, and extensible APIs. The PMA managed interoperability, certification and logo programs according to these specifications.
On February 11, 2014, the Alliance for Wireless Power (A4WP) and the PMA announced that they signed an agreement calling for the following immediate next steps:[3]
- PMA adopts the A4WP Rezence specification as the PMA magnetic resonance charging specification for both transmitters and receivers in both single and multi-mode configurations
- A4WP adopts the PMA inductive specification as a supported option for multi-mode inductive, magnetic resonance implementations
- A4WP to collaborate with PMA on their open network API for network services management
This agreement was a move toward industry consolidation of wireless charging standards.[4][5]
Acquisition and standards body formed
In 2015 the organization was merged with The Alliance for Wireless Power (A4WP)[3] to form the AirFuel Alliance,[6] a global coalition of companies working together to bring next-generation wireless power technologies to market.
Key Features
- Inductive Coupling
- Digital Transceiver Communication
- Cloud Based Power Management
- PRU Category 1-7. PTU Class 1-6
- PRX Out Max from 3.5W to 50W (Cat. 1 TBD)
- PTX Input Max from 2W to 70W
Mark of Interoperability
The 'Electron P' mark of interoperability was required to set compatibility standards across markets and industry, and across all links in the delivery chain of the alliance. It was used by industries and companies that adopt and implement the PMA standards. It was displayed at coffee shops, clubs, hair salons, airline terminals, entertainment venues, and on mobile phone accessories.
Semi-Annual Conferences and Quarterly PlugFests
PMA conducted member conferences.
Working Groups
Remove ads
Adoption
On June 11, 2014, Starbucks announced plans to provide wireless chargers at its coffeehouses in the United States and to test the wireless chargers in select European and Asian markets.[7][8]
See also
- Qi, a competing wireless power standard promoted by Wireless Power Consortium
- Rezence, a cooperative wireless power standard promoted by the A4WP
- Open Dots, a competing wireless power standard promoted by Open Dots Alliance[9]
References
External links
Wikiwand - on
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Remove ads