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September 14, 2005

Power generation from walking

This week's Science carries a really interesting article by Rome et al. about extracting power from the human gait. The basic idea is that you wear a frame that carries a heavy sprung weight. The bouncing of this weight up and down while the user walks drives a generator. At ordinary walking paces with a 38 kg load this allows the production of around 6 W of power.

The really interesting part is that some of this energy appears to be free. If you're walking at 5.6 km/h and carrying a 29 kg load, the power input to the pack is 12.5 W. Humans operate at about 25% efficiency but when you measure the delta in energy consumption (using O2 consumption) it's only about 19 W, which is a lot less than you expect. It's not clear exactly what's going on but it appears that the sprung pack is giving the wearers some sort of biomechanical assistance--the gait is different when the wait is sprung than when it is locked in place on the pack.

Other interesting points in the paper:

Of course, 20 kg (let alone 38 kg) is a fairly heavy pack, and this is just for the power generating system. You've still got to carry the rest of your gear. But lots of devices need far less than 6 W, so you could probably get away with a lighter load and generator. If you could get this down to 10-15 pounds total, that would be pretty interesting.

Posted by ekr at September 14, 2005 10:17 PM | Filed under:

Comments

Presumably, the load plate could be replaced with the actual rest of the stuff you're carrying anyway -- you only need the "extra" weight of the rest of the setup, which needn't necessarily weigh very much at all if it's all hollow carbon-fiber tubing or something.

Posted by: Craig Hughes at September 14, 2005 11:20 PM

Yeah, that's probably true. Though the balance of that might be a little weird, since a lot of packing a pack is dealing with the variable density of the materials, a problem which may be even worse if they bounce up and down....

Posted by: EKR at September 15, 2005 6:51 AM