Design and experiments of a self-charged power bank by harvesting sustainable human motion

In this study, a self-charged power bank integrated with an energy harvester was developed to harness human biomechanical energy and sustainably recharge a power bank. In the energy harvester, a spring–mass damping system is used to transform the human body’s movement during walking into the rotatio...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Longhan Xie, Jiehong Li, Siqi Cai, Xiaodong Li
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2016-05-01
Series:Advances in Mechanical Engineering
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/1687814016651371
id doaj-a5ec66b204fe42fab74cbd78765e2c86
record_format Article
spelling doaj-a5ec66b204fe42fab74cbd78765e2c862020-11-25T02:55:14ZengSAGE PublishingAdvances in Mechanical Engineering1687-81402016-05-01810.1177/168781401665137110.1177_1687814016651371Design and experiments of a self-charged power bank by harvesting sustainable human motionLonghan XieJiehong LiSiqi CaiXiaodong LiIn this study, a self-charged power bank integrated with an energy harvester was developed to harness human biomechanical energy and sustainably recharge a power bank. In the energy harvester, a spring–mass damping system is used to transform the human body’s movement during walking into the rotation of a gear train and drive rotary generators to produce electricity to recharge the battery through a rectifying circuit. A mathematical model was built to examine the power output of the energy harvester under different excitation conditions. A prototype was built to test the performances of the harvester, and experiments on the prototype fixed on the ankle, wrist, and torso were conducted, which indicated that the measured power output was 0.35 W, 0.16 W, and 10 mW, respectively, when testers walked at 2.0 m/s (the circular frequency of foot step is about 14.5 rad/s). The experiments indicate that a higher walking velocity as well as excitation amplitude and frequency could result in higher output power.https://doi.org/10.1177/1687814016651371
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Longhan Xie
Jiehong Li
Siqi Cai
Xiaodong Li
spellingShingle Longhan Xie
Jiehong Li
Siqi Cai
Xiaodong Li
Design and experiments of a self-charged power bank by harvesting sustainable human motion
Advances in Mechanical Engineering
author_facet Longhan Xie
Jiehong Li
Siqi Cai
Xiaodong Li
author_sort Longhan Xie
title Design and experiments of a self-charged power bank by harvesting sustainable human motion
title_short Design and experiments of a self-charged power bank by harvesting sustainable human motion
title_full Design and experiments of a self-charged power bank by harvesting sustainable human motion
title_fullStr Design and experiments of a self-charged power bank by harvesting sustainable human motion
title_full_unstemmed Design and experiments of a self-charged power bank by harvesting sustainable human motion
title_sort design and experiments of a self-charged power bank by harvesting sustainable human motion
publisher SAGE Publishing
series Advances in Mechanical Engineering
issn 1687-8140
publishDate 2016-05-01
description In this study, a self-charged power bank integrated with an energy harvester was developed to harness human biomechanical energy and sustainably recharge a power bank. In the energy harvester, a spring–mass damping system is used to transform the human body’s movement during walking into the rotation of a gear train and drive rotary generators to produce electricity to recharge the battery through a rectifying circuit. A mathematical model was built to examine the power output of the energy harvester under different excitation conditions. A prototype was built to test the performances of the harvester, and experiments on the prototype fixed on the ankle, wrist, and torso were conducted, which indicated that the measured power output was 0.35 W, 0.16 W, and 10 mW, respectively, when testers walked at 2.0 m/s (the circular frequency of foot step is about 14.5 rad/s). The experiments indicate that a higher walking velocity as well as excitation amplitude and frequency could result in higher output power.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/1687814016651371
work_keys_str_mv AT longhanxie designandexperimentsofaselfchargedpowerbankbyharvestingsustainablehumanmotion
AT jiehongli designandexperimentsofaselfchargedpowerbankbyharvestingsustainablehumanmotion
AT siqicai designandexperimentsofaselfchargedpowerbankbyharvestingsustainablehumanmotion
AT xiaodongli designandexperimentsofaselfchargedpowerbankbyharvestingsustainablehumanmotion
_version_ 1724717326979301376