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Sustainability exercise: UNT students helping power rec center

DENTON (UNT), Texas -- The University of North Texas is converting the Pohl
Recreation Center into one of the largest human power plants in the country
by capturing the kinetic energy produced by exercise machines and converting
it into electricity.
The 36 elliptical machines that are included in the project are fitted with
a device from ReRev, a Florida company that developed the system, which
feeds electricity produced by each machine into the recreation center's
power grid.  ReRev says during a typical 30-minute workout, each machine
produces 50 watt hours of clean, carbon-free electricity, enough to power a
compact fluorescent light bulb for 2.5 hours or a laptop computer for an
hour.

"UNT has a vast array of sustainability programs under way on campus and
this project underscores our commitment to saving energy," said Laura Klein,
senior associate director of recreational sports at UNT. "It's a great
educational opportunity for our students, faculty and staff. This system
provides a lesson in sustainability and energy use. As they work out,
they'll be thinking of the energy they're producing and perhaps it will
influence them to consider sustainability in their daily lives."

A monitor will be set up near the ellipticals that will indicate the amount
of electricity being produced, giving users a clear picture of how much
energy is being saved.

"Students are huge proponents of renewable energy projects and the ReRev
system gives them a chance to participate while getting a good workout,"
Klein said. "Students are very aware of sustainability and the need to find
alternate, clean power sources, which bodes well for our future because they
will be the ones who will be leading those efforts in a very short time."

ReRev captures and diverts the kinetic energy produced by exercise and given
off as heat. Instead, ReRev's system converts it into alternating current
that's used in the recreation center's power grid. That converted
electricity is fed directly into the building's electrical supply, lowering
the buildings overall use by a small amount. Because each of the elliptical
machines normally dissipates heat into the room, the system also means
slightly lower air conditioning costs.

"We're not going to power the building from these machines, but we are
generating clean electricity and helping educate students. The real value of
the system is both in showing how much work it takes to make electricity as
well as the lesson in making buildings more sustainable," Klein said.

Approximately 20 universities in the U.S. are using the ReRev system.



Alexandra Ponette-González, Ph.D.
NSF Postdoctoral Fellow
Department of Geography and the Environment
University of Texas at Austin
--------------------------------------
Department of Geography
University of North Texas (Fall 2011)


-- 
Alexandra Ponette-González, Ph.D.
NSF Postdoctoral Fellow
Department of Geography and the Environment
University of Texas at Austin

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