homehome Home chatchat Notifications


Charge your cell phone just by walking

  Charging your cell phone may be as simple as a walk in the park – literally. Scientists have created a mechanism that harvests the mechanical energy from the knees while you are walking. To prove this fascinating concept, they used six volunteers which wore the device while walking on a treadmill and were able […]

Mihai Andrei
February 8, 2008 @ 9:33 am

share Share

 

power people

Charging your cell phone may be as simple as a walk in the park – literally. Scientists have created a mechanism that harvests the mechanical energy from the knees while you are walking. To prove this fascinating concept, they used six volunteers which wore the device while walking on a treadmill and were able to produce about five watts of electrical power each. That means they each produced enough energy for about 10 cell phones!The results were published in the Feb. 8 issue of the journal, Science. Here’s the scientists’ claim on the device:

“Since muscles are the powerhouses of the body, my colleagues and I designed our device to generate electricity from the motion of the knee joint,” said Max Donelan, director of the Locomotion Laboratory at Simon Fraser University in Canada. “It resembles a knee brace and weighs about 1.5 kilograms [3.3 pounds] including the gearing and generator.”

The process itself is fairly simple, as it uses an electrical generator which is coupled to the knee and captures the energy of a person’s movement. When whoever wears it extends the knee, a part of the device starts spinning the generator, which produces energy and when the knee is flexed (here comes the brilliant simplicity) the device is turned off, so as not to consume energy. The machine senses motion and it knows when to turn off and on. Scientists also measured the oxygen intake and carbon-dioxide outtake and found out that it requires very little extra energy from the wearer.

“People are an excellent source of portable power,” Donelan said. “An average-sized person stores as much energy in fat as a 1,000-kilogram battery. People recharge their body batteries with food and, lucky for us, there is about as much useful energy in a 35-gram granola bar as in a 3.5-kilogram lithium-ion battery.”

There has been word of a similar device using a backpack almost three years ago, but it hasn’t materialized yet. This work sounds incredibly near, it could be used to power computers and other electrical machines where energy is scarce.

share Share

This Tiny Nuclear Battery Could Last for Thousands of Years Without Charging

The radiocarbon battery is supposed to be safe for everyday operations.

Earth’s Longest Volcanic Ridge May Be an Underwater Moving Hotspot

Scientists uncover surprising evidence that the Kerguelen hotspot, responsible for the 5,000-kilometer-long Ninetyeast Ridge, exhibited significant motion.

Physicists just explained why the pop of a beer bottle sounds so perfect

A high-speed peek into what really happens when your beer bottle goes “pop.”

New NASA satellite mapped the oceans like never before

We know more about our Moon and Mars than the bottom of our oceans.

Physicists Think They've Found a Way to Harvest Energy from Earth's Rotation — And It Might Be Just Crazy Enough to Work

A wacky-looking hollow device is giving perpetual motion machine vibes.

Did WWI Dazzle Camouflage Actually Work? Scientists Revisit a 105-Year-Old Experiment to Find Out

Painting ships like zebras was a bold move, but it likely didn't fool U-boats. Something else worked though.

New Organic Semiconductor That Spirals Electrons Like a Corkscrew Could Lead to Brighter, More Energy-Efficient Screens

The technology could be applied to not just screens but also quantum computing and spintronics.

Black Holes Might Not Be Cosmic Dead-Ends But Rather the Beginning Of White Holes

From black holes to white holes. Who would've thought?

Cats Actually Have Hundreds of Facial Expressions and They Mirror Each Other to Form an Emotional Bond

Want to befriend a cat? Don't forget to blink or squint back if a cat does the same at you.

Physicist Claims Gravity Might Emerge From Entropy. Could This Unite Quantum Mechanics and Gravity?

A novel theory could finally bridge the gap between quantum physics and general relativity.