A number of companies are marketing waterproofing technologies designed to protect consumer electronic devices, “an endeavor that may revolutionize the mobile market,” suggests Mobiledia.
P2i, HzO, and Liquipel are companies competing to bring their water-repellent technologies to portable devices such as phones and laptops.
P2i waterproofs by spraying devices with chemicals, placing them in a vacuum chamber, and then pulsing electronic currents through the chamber. This bonds the waterproofing chemical “to every atom on the phone’s surface.”
HzO coats a phone’s internal components and claims to protect submerged phones for longer than the P2i process. “Our coating is thicker, building layers on top of each other and providing a protection that can endure underwater for extended periods of time,” claims HzO president Paul Clayson.
California-based start-up Liquipel (which ETCentric reported on during CES), waterproofs phones at a cost of $60 per device. “Liquipel is reportedly negotiating a contract with Fujitsu to coat its upcoming tablets and phones, as the company aims to expand its mail-in business,” reports Mobiledia.
As of now, external cases dominate the market, but off-the-shelf waterproofing techniques could have numerous applications and could make other products obsolete.
No Comments Yet
You can be the first to comment!
Leave a comment
You must be logged in to post a comment.