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Look Ma, No Batteries! Hands On With Lenovo's Self-Charging Keyboard

At CES 2025, we checked out Lenovo's new eco-friendly wireless keyboard, which ditches traditional batteries in favor of a photovoltaic panel.

 & Zackery Cuevas Writer, Hardware

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(Credit: Lenovo)

Among the many laptops and desktops that Lenovo announced at CES 2025 is an intriguing peripheral: the Self-Charging Bluetooth Keyboard. This unique productivity keyboard ditches the traditional battery, instead utilizing solar and ambient light to charge and store energy.

The Lenovo Self-Charging Bluetooth Keyboard might seem like your run-of-the-mill keyboard, but it comes with a party trick that might just save you a buck in the long run. Using advanced photovoltaic technology and fast-charging supercapacitors, the keyboard actually harnesses ambient light to store energy, eliminating the need for disposable batteries.

We’ve seen plenty of solar-powered devices over the years, but only recently have we seen viable alternatives to battery-powered PC accessories. In fact, at last year’s CES, we observed dye-sensitized solar cells that promise a green alternative to powering our devices. We’re years away from one of these solutions powering a laptop or even a phone, but the tech is perfectly suited for smaller devices like keyboards and mice

(Credit: Lenovo)

In this keyboard's case, a high-efficiency light-collecting panel sits at the top of the device, where it's constantly absorbing either solar or ambient light. At the same time, supercapacitors store energy from the light captured through the panel. Unlike conventional batteries, supercapacitors have an exceptionally long lifespan, lasting hundreds of thousands of charge-discharge cycles, whereas lithium batteries typically last only five years or less.

New battery technology aside, the keyboard is quite a looker. A spill-resistant design gives the full-size keyboard a modern look, while a three-zone layout divides the keyboard into sections, offering a wide array of customization options. While you have the option for a USB-C connection (hidden by a removable cap at the top of the keyboard), you can also connect up to three devices via Bluetooth. Syncing the keyboard up with the Lenovo Accessories and Display Manager app will offer both on-screen brightness indicators and real-time power tracking to manage the keyboard’s battery levels on the fly.

The eco-friendly Lenovo Self-Charging Bluetooth Keyboard will cost $69.99 when it goes on sale this May.

About Our Expert

Zackery Cuevas

Zackery Cuevas

Writer, Hardware

My Experience

I’m a PCMag reviewer and ISF-certified TV calibrator focused on computer accessories, laptops, gaming monitors, and video games. I’ve been writing, playing, and complaining about games for as long as I remember, but it wasn’t until recently that I’ve been able to shout my opinions directly at a larger audience. My work has appeared on iMore, Windows Central, Android Central, and TWICE, and I have a diverse portfolio of editing work under my belt from my time spent at Scholastic and Oxford University Press. I also have a few book-author credits under my belt—I’ve contributed to the sci-fi anthology Under New Suns, and I’ve even written a Peppa Pig book.

The Technology I Use

My rig consists of an Intel Core i7-10700K processor, a GeForce RTX 3060 graphics card, and 16GB of DDR4 RAM. I also use an Alienware AW3225QF 4K QD-OLED monitor, a SteelSeries Apex Pro Mechanical Gaming Keyboard, and a Razer Basilisk V3 Pro 35K mouse. For work, I use the Razer BlackWidow V4 Pro 75% keyboard and the Logitech MX Master 3S mouse. When I’m not on my main computer, you’ll find me cycling among my Nintendo Switch 2, PlayStation 5, and Xbox Series X.

In addition to my physical gear, I use Google Drive heavily to keep track of all my writing and Dungeons & Dragons campaigns. I’m an iPhone user, but aside from my Powerbeats Pro Wireless Earbuds, I’ve largely avoided being sucked too deeply into Apple’s ecosystem (at least right now). I do my best to remain platform-agnostic.

That said, I’ve been a Nintendo fanboy since the N64, though my first console was the Sega Genesis. I love retro gaming and own a wide variety of classic consoles, including a Nintendo Entertainment System, a Super Nintendo, a GameCube, a Wii, multiple older PlayStations (1, 2, and 3), an Xbox 360, and a Sega Dreamcast.

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