BODY ENERGY AS A POWER SOURCE
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Body energy as a power source
Summary:
Smartphones, MP3 players, sports electronics devices such as
pulse meters or trackers, medical equipment such as tonometers, pacemakers of
the heart, or insulin pumps: An increasing number of electronic companions make
daily life easier for us. But as useful these smart helpers may be: Their
constant hunger for electricity is a problem. The solution: power supply by
means of energy produced by body movements.
Systems converting energy of the body into electricity,
such as this foot prosthesis, are to be used by KIT scientists to power
portable electric devices, such as smartphones or pacemakers of the heart.
Smartphones, MP3 players, sports electronics devices such
as pulse meters or trackers, medical equipment such as tonometers, pacemakers
of the heart, or insulin pumps: An increasing number of electronic companions
make daily life easier for us. But as useful these smart helpers may be: Their
constant hunger for electricity is a problem. The solution: power supply by
means of energy produced by body movements. This is the research subject of
scientists at the Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT).
"If you want to harvest the
energy produced by movements of the body, the challenge lies in the requirement
that this power generation must not demand any additional power input by the
user," says Christian Pylatiuk of the Institute for Applied Informatics
(IAI). The physician and his team have developed two systems that meet this
requirement: One design for the lower extremity uses body weight during
walking. One small cushion each filled with a liquid is installed under the
heel and the ball of a walker. Impact on the ground and rolling off causes oil
to be pumped back and forth through a hose connection, in this way, very much
like a miniaturized tidal power plant, driving a piston which, in turn, drives
a generator. This miniature power plant was installed by Pylatiuk in a foot
prosthesis equipped with sensors actively supporting the movements of the
wearer. "However, the mechanism could just as well be installed in a
sports shoe to operate a speed trainer or a performance diagnosing
system," says Pylatiuk.
A different generator can be worn on
the wrist like a wristwatch. The special difficulty in this case: To operate a
generator, the highly discontinuous movements of the arm must be converted into
a continuous movement. For this purpose, Pylatiuk fell back on proven
technologies: The mode of operation is similar to that of an automatic
watch." Unlike a clockwork, where energy is stored by a gyrating mass
cocking a spring, an induction motor is used in this case in which an eccentric
element moves a magnet back and forth in a coil. The maximum power of 2.2
milliwatt is not yet sufficient for instance to run a hearing aid or charge a
smartphone. However, "we are currently working on a more powerful consumer
version," says Pylatiuk. He expects results to come forth by the end of
the year.
Explanation of the animation: Below
the heel and the ball of the walker there are cushions filled with a liquid.
The impact and the heel-to-toe motion of the foot causes oil to be pumped
through a hose connecting the two elements, in this way, like a miniaturized
tidal power plant, operating a piston which, in turn, drives a generator
generating power.
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