Design of a Sustainable System for Harvesting Energy from Humans, Based on the Piezoelectric Effect in Places of High Mobilization of People

Ana Isabel Fernández Carmona, Nelly Michelle Restrepo Madriñan, Tania Torres Raymond, Luis Andrés Saavedra Robinson

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingConference contributionpeer-review

1 Scopus citations

Abstract

The present project seeks to design a novel sustainable energy generation system at a University taking advantage of non-conventional renewable energy that can be obtained from humans using piezoelectric tiles. This idea came up from the opportunity to use human movement as a source of energy due to the great flow of people on campus, that’s why the aim of this project was to analyze their characteristics to design the distribution of the tiles on the floor in such a way that the greatest amount of energy can be obtained. The method was based in the anthropometrical and biomechanical profiling of the population in order to quantify the potential energy that could be obtained through the movement of people when they activate the piezoelectric product, located and distributed in the place that will be identified as the area with the greatest possibility of energy generation. The tiles proposed for the final design are composed of 80% recyclable materials, which shows that it is an environmental-friendly product. As a result, it was obtained that when a woman with a weight of 48,88 kg (5 percentile) activates a tile produce a power of 4,83 W and a man with a weight of 93,94 kg (95 percentile) produce 9,67 W. The selection procedure of the piezoelectric system configuration was designed using the methodology of the hierarchical process analysis – HPA. The project also contributes to mitigate the environmental impact and the costs of current energy sources from the university. If the piezoelectric tiles were installed as indicated by the final configuration in the main traffic path obtained in the analysis of this project, 84.478 kg of CO2 could be saved in the case of producing the minimum energy which is 424.517 kWh and 169.133 kg of CO2 saved in the case of producing the maximum energy corresponding to 849.913 kWh.

Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationProceedings of the 20th Congress of the International Ergonomics Association (IEA 2018) - Volume VIII
Subtitle of host publicationErgonomics and Human Factors in Manufacturing, Agriculture, Building and Construction, Sustainable Development and Mining
EditorsSebastiano Bagnara, Yushi Fujita, Riccardo Tartaglia, Sara Albolino, Thomas Alexander
PublisherSpringer Verlag
Pages626-637
Number of pages12
ISBN (Print)9783319960678
DOIs
StatePublished - 2019
Event20th Congress of the International Ergonomics Association, IEA 2018 - Florence, Italy
Duration: 26 Aug 201830 Aug 2018

Publication series

NameAdvances in Intelligent Systems and Computing
Volume825
ISSN (Print)2194-5357

Conference

Conference20th Congress of the International Ergonomics Association, IEA 2018
Country/TerritoryItaly
CityFlorence
Period26/08/1830/08/18

Keywords

  • Biomechanics
  • Harvesting energy from humans
  • Piezoelectric effect
  • Sustainability

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