Rezence (wireless charging standard)

Rezence
Alliance for Wireless Power (A4WP)
Official Rezence logo, representing the wireless charging standard and the Alliance for Wireless Power (A4WP)
First published2012; 12 years ago (2012)
OrganizationAlliance for Wireless Power
LicenseOpen standard
CopyrightLogo and trademark
Websiterezence.com rezence.com/vn88 rezence.com/me88/
Official Rezence brandmark, the A4WP uses this mark of interoperability to show that various devices are compatible with Rezence systems.

Rezence (pronounced reh-zense) was an interface standard developed by the Alliance for Wireless Power (A4WP) for wireless electrical power transfer based on the principles of magnetic resonance. The Rezence system consisted of a single power transmitter unit (PTU) and one or more power receiver units (PRUs). The interface standard supported power transfer up to 50 watts,[1] at distances up to 5 centimeters.[2] The power transmission frequency is 6.78 MHz, and up to eight devices could be powered from a single PTU depending on transmitter and receiver geometry and power levels. A Bluetooth Low Energy link was defined in the A4WP system intended for control of power levels, identification of valid loads and protection of non-compliant devices.[3][4]

The A4WP was formed in early 2012 with the intent to create a wireless power transfer standard to compete with the existing Qi standard. Board member companies[5] included Broadcom, Gill Electronics, Integrated Device Technology (IDT),[6] Intel,[7][8] Qualcomm, Samsung Electronics,[9] Samsung Electro-Mechanics, and WiTricity.[10]

In January 2015 A4WP and the Power Matters Alliance announced that the two organizations intended to merge into the AirFuel Alliance.[11]

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