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Dyson Is Working on an Air Purifier That's Also Headphones

The U.K. company submitted patents for a “wearable air purifier” this year.

Dyson Is Working on an Air Purifier That's Also Headphones
A Dyson Airpurifier. (Source: Dyson’s official website)

(Bloomberg) -- Dyson is considering developing a wearable air purifier that could double as a pair of headphones, hoping to tap demand from pollution-choked cities in Asia, people with knowledge of the project said.

The U.K. company submitted patents for a “wearable air purifier” this year, according to filings to the U.K. Intellectual Property Office. The gadget is primarily an air purifier, but headphone capabilities may be added, two people said. They asked not to be identified because the project is private.

Floor-standing air purifiers are big business in Asia. There are even a few versions available that can be worn around the neck, with a limited number listed on Amazon.com.

Best known for its vacuum cleaners and hand dryers, Dyson Ltd. has been expanding its increasingly popular line of floor-standing air scrubbers. In November, it launched the latest version: a purifying fan-heater. But the headphone market would mark a leap for Dyson, pitting it against Apple Inc.’s AirPods and Beats and high-end gadgets from the likes of Bose and Sennheiser.

“Dyson never comments on technology we may or may not be developing,” a company spokeswoman said in an email.

Dyson files a large number of patents for products that may never make it to mass production. In 2009, it filed for a hydraulic food juicer that has yet to emerge as a final product.

However, the potential to market a wearable purifier to consumers in smog-filled Chinese cities could be a major driver for the project. Chinese President Xi Jinping has declared pollution one of the government’s three most pressing problems. Asia has been instrumental to Dyson’s recent rapid growth: revenue increased 40 percent to 3.5 billion pounds ($4.6 billion) in 2017, almost doubling in two years. Asia generated almost three-quarters of Dyson’s revenue growth that year, with Shanghai the top-selling city for its purifiers.

The U.K. tech company is also continuing with a 2-billion-pound plan to start building electric cars. The company is busy turning a former airfield into a vehicle-testing site, and in October announced its plans to build its car factory in Singapore.

To contact the reporters on this story: Giles Turner in London at gturner35@bloomberg.net;Debby Wu in Taipei at dwu278@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Tom Giles at tgiles5@bloomberg.net, Giles Turner, Edwin Chan

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