On the 5th (local time), the Ecovacs booth at IFA 2025, the largest consumer electronics and IT exhibition in Europe, is held in Berlin, Germany./Courtesy of Choi Jihee.

On the 5th (local time), at the IFA 2025, Europe's largest electronics and IT exhibition held in Berlin, Germany, the EcoFlow booth attracted attendees in front of a display showing the new robotic vacuum cleaner 'Dibot X11' cleaning non-stop for over three hours. This robotic vacuum returned to the station for three minutes to clean the mopping cloth, charging its battery rapidly by about 6%. Once the mopping was completed, it resumed cleaning immediately after stopping the charge. This effectively achieved continuous cleaning, compensating for the limitations of operation time that relied solely on battery capacity.

An engineer from EcoFlow met at the booth noted, "Existing robotic vacuum cleaners stop in place when they run out of battery, and it takes 2 to 3 hours to recharge, disrupting the cleaning flow." He added, "To solve this, we developed the industry-first 'Power Boost' technology, allowing all functions to be activated without battery concerns."

The new robot vacuum cleaner 'Deebot X11' on display at the Ecovacs booth at IFA 2025 charges 6% during the 3 minutes of cleaning the mop, and a notification indicates that the battery is at 66.75%./Courtesy of Choi Jihee.

In the center of the booth, another robotic vacuum of the same model was demonstrating a technology that automatically extends the mopping roller at corners while cleaning. Typically, the mopping cloth is attached under the main unit, leaving cleaning blind spots in corners. To address this issue, EcoFlow enabled the mopping roller in this new product to protrude 1.5 cm outward. In fact, the robotic vacuum expanded its cloth outward whenever it reached the edges of walls or gaps around furniture during cleaning, thereby widening the cleaning range.

The new robot vacuum cleaner model Deebot X11 from Ecovacs does mopping without any blind spots as the roller mop pops out from the main body when it comes into contact with the wall./Courtesy of Choi Jihee.

At the exhibition, EcoFlow showcased various lifestyle robots that cover both indoor and outdoor applications, going beyond just indoor robotic vacuum cleaners. The new window robotic vacuum 'WinBot Mini,' highly demanded in Korea, also garnered interest from European attendees. The main unit of the robotic vacuum is only 55 mm thick, allowing it to stick closely to glass windows and clean every corner.

An official from EcoFlow stated, "The WinBot series has surpassed cumulative sales of $100 million (about 140 billion won) in the Chinese and European markets," adding, "This new product, set to launch right after the exhibition, has increased suction power and pressure, and features advanced intelligent path planning for effective cleaning up to the edges of windows."

Additionally, EcoFlow expanded its service robot product line by introducing the underwater robotic vacuum 'Ultra Marine', which automatically cleans debris from pool floors and walls. David Chen, CEO of EcoFlow, said at the new product announcement the day before, "In line with our business philosophy of 'robots for everyone,' we will continue to expand into various fields with robotic vacuum cleaners, window cleaners, lawn mowing robots, and more."

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