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September 30, 2014

Harvesting energy from walking

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A device that fits into a shoe harvests the energy made by walking and successfully uses it in watch batteries.

At the Center for Research in Advanced Materials (CIMAV), scientists decided to "capture" the produced by people . They designed a pill-shaped cylinder adapted to a in order to store the mechanical-vibrational energy  the person generates when walking.

The captured energy was used to recharge a clock with triple A batteries. The prototype designed by CIMAV in Chihuahua, in the north of Mexico, adapted the device, which has a diameter of two inches and a thickness of three millimeters, to the sole of a shoe.

Abel Macias Hurtado, head of research and specialist in materials science, said that the device is piezoelectric, measuring pressure, force and acceleration when placed in the sole, and uses a circuit to convert into microwatts; once connected to the batteries, it was tested with good results.

"Piezoelectric" is a term that comes from pressure and electricity. When walking, mechanical force is generated which is "captured or harvested" to generate the energy that is "stored" in the device for further use.

The specialist indicates that in the area of nanostructured materials, an important basis of research is to harvest or produce clean energy, and this prototype is ideal for that purpose.

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"We want to improve the circuit of the tablet to make it more efficient at capturing energy. Now we are working in making it more efficient. Currently, we already have ," says the researcher at CIMAV.

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Hurtado Macias indicates that the prototype was implemented in an ordinary shoe with a wide sole; while walking, people step and makes contact with the ground. That's where the energy is generated.

In this work, engineering physics students of the Autonomous University of Chihuahua and Jesus Gonzalez collaborated for the evaluation of results.

Using the same premise, Hurtado Macias said that although a pair of shoes can generate power for the operation of a battery, he wants to adapt a similar system on a mat and place it on the entry of a mass transport system like the subway. There, it could generate energy capable of illuminating the public transport stations.

"Today, the energy generated by people walking is wasted; if we learn to harvest it and turn it into electricity, we can contribute to the global impact.

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