Humans
are not very efficient. When we walk, we waste close to 20 watts of
energy per second. Instead of turning all calories into lift or forward
motion, we turn most of them into heat that’s quickly dissipated. It is the way to harvest the wasted energy from
human motion and convert it into about 10 watts of electricity.
The device is based on a physical phenomenon called electrowetting:
If you apply electrical voltage to certain liquids, the liquid moves.
This means you have converted electrical energy (the current) to
mechanical energy (the liquid in motion). We reversed the process,
forcing liquid to move over electrodes. In the shoe, you have two
flexible plastic bladders, one under the heel and the other under the
toe. The bladders are filled with a mixture of oil and water and
connected by a thin, snaking tube. When you step down on your heel, you
compress the rear bladder, and several milliliters of liquid travel
through the tube to the front bladder. Step on the toe, and the process
is reversed.
The tube is lined with a thin film of electrodes, and as the liquid
slides back and forth, the electrodes charge—electrowetting in reverse. A
small battery stores the energy, and you can access that energy by way
of a micro-USB port on the heel of the shoe. The Inventer also invented a way,
like Wi-Fi, to transfer power from shoe to cellphone battery. Military
or police might like having a regular supply of power, but
most people wouldn’t be happy dealing with wires connected to their
footwear.
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