This Startup Raised Over $9 Million To Make Medical Implants Charge Wirelessly

When Grayson Zulauf worked for a commercial electric vehicle company in 2013, he recalls being excited about the prospect of using wireless technologies to recharge EV fleets. But while he was earning his PhD in electronics at Stanford years later, Zulauf realized that wireless technologies were greatly needed in the medical industry to recharge batteries of implanted medical devices such as pacemakers, implantable cardioverter-defibrillators and insulin pumps.

Go To Article >

Previous
Previous

Resonant Link Raises $9.3 Million Investment for Wireless Charging Technology Powering the Future of Mobility

Next
Next

Army selects four companies for lightweight power solutions