HYPETRAIN
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So, personally, I'm really excited about having wireless energy harvesting. I was looking up articles on piezoelectrics, since that seems to be the leading thing these days, and I encountered an article that designed a MEMS circuit (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3958224/). It's fairly recent, so I assume it's atleast close to modern piezoelectric tech.
Basically, I'm wondering how long it would take for these systems to really charge a phone. The values seem quite small..
" 66.75 μW, or power density of 5.19 μW·mm−3·g−2 with an optimal resistive load of 220 kΩ from 5 m/s2 acceleration"
But I'm not sure what it means in practical terms. How long would it take for a device like this to charge, say, a 3.6V smartphone with a 2000 mAh battery if it was operating at peak excitation?
Basically, I'm wondering how long it would take for these systems to really charge a phone. The values seem quite small..
" 66.75 μW, or power density of 5.19 μW·mm−3·g−2 with an optimal resistive load of 220 kΩ from 5 m/s2 acceleration"
But I'm not sure what it means in practical terms. How long would it take for a device like this to charge, say, a 3.6V smartphone with a 2000 mAh battery if it was operating at peak excitation?
) , carpet underlay for homes and offices and they're all there because we are aware of how much energy we are using to get around. My belief is that, if you managed to market shoes that would charge your personal electronics, people would visit their doctors more often because they were feeling unaccountably fatigued from the few Watts of extra energy drain. We are incredibly sensitive to this sort of thing. (With increasing age, I am very well aware of diminishing 'spring in my step')