Charging batteries--a walk in the
park.
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
Simon Fraser University (SFU) researchers have developed a new
wearable technology that generates electricity from the natural motion
of walking. It promises to revolutionize the way we charge portable
battery-powered devices.
The biomechanical energy harvester, featured in a recent issue of
the journal Science, resembles a lightweight orthopedic knee brace. The
device harvests energy from the end of a walker's step, when the
muscles are working to slow the movement of the leg, in much the same
way that hybrid-electric cars recycle power from braking.
Wearing a device on each leg, an individual can generate up to five
watts of electricity with little additional physical effort. Walking
more quickly generates as much as 13 watts of electricity. At that rate,
one minute of walking provides enough electricity to sustain 30 minutes
of talk time on a mobile phone.
"This technology promises to have significant medical,
military, and consumer applications," said lead author Max Donelan,
an assistant professor of kinesiology and associate member of
engineering science at SFU. "A fully charged battery pack
represents more than just a mere convenience. It allows a soldier to get
back home safely. It benefits stroke victims, amputees, and others who
rely on power-assisted medical devices for mobility. It means a better
quality of life for the developing world, where a half-billion children
live without easy access to electricity. And of course, it is a
necessity to anyone in the developed world who has come to rely on
portable electronics for work or play."
The biomechanical energy harvester is rigged with a generator,
clutch, gears, and a real-time control system to selectively engage and
disengage power generation. It works in much the same way that
regenerative brakes charge batteries in hybrid vehicles. Regenerative
brakes collect the kinetic energy that would otherwise be dissipated as
heat when the car slows down. Similarly, the harvester collects the
energy typically lost when the muscles of the body slow the knee after
swinging the leg forward to take a step.
Donelan's research team is supported by funding from the
Michael Smith Foundation for Health Research, the Natural Sciences and
Engineering Research Council of Canada, and the Canadian Institutes for
Health Research. Donelan plans to have a working prototype available
within 18 months through his spinoff company, Bionic Power Inc.
Simon Fraser University
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NOTE: All illustrations and photos have been removed from this article.