"It's pretty cool," says Henry Sodano, an adjunct professor of
engineering "mechanical engineering -- engineering mechanics, who
recently accepted a faculty
appointment at Arizona State University. "We are harnessing free energy
that would normally be lost."

With mechanical engineering graduate students Jonathan Granstrom and
Joel Feenstra, Sodano designed straps made of a piezoelectric material
that can convert
mechanical strain into electrical energy.

You probably wouldn't be able to plug a TV into your backpack; the
system is designed for use with devices that require small amounts of
electricity, such
as a GPS unit. Alternatively, a hiker could charge up a headlamp while
walking during the day and then turn it on after dark. Or the backpack
could generate
enough power to recharge a handheld computer.

The straps are made of a nylon-like polymer that produces a fluctuating,
AC current that could be stored in a battery or a capacitor. The
researchers teamed
up with the Blacksburg, Va., company NanoSonic Inc. to develop a
specialized electrode grown on the surface of the strap using
nanotechnology.

The beauty of the design is that it requires no extra effort on the part
of the user, unlike other devices that transform mechanical energy into
electricity,
such as wind-up flashlights. It's part of a new field called "energy
harvesting."

"We're trying to capture free power. You don't need watts of energy for
many modern electronics," Sodano said. "We're not trying to generate
significant
levels of power, just enough to perform a useful function."

Someone shouldering a heavy pack, such as a soldier in the field, could
generate 45.6 milliwatts of power walking two or three miles per hour.
That's enough
wattage to power small electronics. Or, it could be accumulated for
later use.

"In general, we want to accumulate the power before using it; for
example you could walk for 20 minutes then have enough power to talk for
2.5 minutes on
your cell phone," Sodano says.

The research was funded by the Office of Naval Research, which is
investigating power sources for Marines in the field. The researchers
hope to receive
additional support to develop a prototype and then to commercialize
their innovation.

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