A new breakthrough in Bluetooth chip technology has shed the battery that typically comes with the small hardware component. Wiliot is seeing success with its paper-thin Bluetooth sticker chip that could land in devices later this year. The chip is able to be battery-free by harnessing the ambient radio waves to power it and has a lot of potential use cases.

As reported by The Verge, one of the things holding back companies from making Bluetooth chips smaller is the need to include a battery. Wiliot looks like it has solved this problem by creating the first battery-free Bluetooth hardware.

It’s Bluetooth sticker chip is roughly the size of a postage stamp and includes an ARM processor, temperature sensor, weight sensor, and cloud-based decryption and authentication.

Based on the demo video below, it does look like it has a short range of 3m (10 feet), but it is cheap to produce and can be used in a multitude of applications.

We’ve seen companies like Energous share concepts for long-distance and short-distance wireless charging in the past. But it’s not ready for larger devices like smartphones, tablets, and computers yet. However, the wireless energy harvesting is a great fit for something like Wiliot’s Bluetooth sticker.

Wiliot shared a few use cases with The Verge:

The report also goes on to suggest some other slick use cases like the weight sensor notifying users when it’s time to order more of their favorite food, or the temperature sensor alerting restaurants or grocery stores when something is too cold or hot.

Wiliot is working with companies in a variety of industries to offer improvement to workflows with this Bluetooth sticker.

Check out the demo video below for a closer look.