This application claims the benefit of U.S. provisional patent application Ser. No. 62/460,831 submitted by the same inventor and incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
The following is a tabulation of some prior art that presently appears relevant:
The present invention relates to energy harvesting from bodily motion and more specifically to pneumatic excitation of turbines embedded in footwear.
Renewable electrical power generation from bodily motion is described in prior art. US patent application Ser. No. 20160351774 relates to an energy harvesting device adapted for use by an athlete to collect thermal energy through a phase change material, which subsequently is converted to electricity. A large spectrum of mobile applications can benefit by such a production of electricity spanning from foot warmers and mobile medical devices to mobile phones, Global Positioning Systems, entertainment electronics and Internet of Things applications, such as internet connected goggles displaying information.
Foot compression on footwear has been extensively described in prior art, especially using piezoelectricity and mechanical gear trains. U.S. patent application with Ser. No. 20060021261 describes an article of footwear which includes a piezoelectric actuator to generate electricity. Shenk and Paradiso have extensively studied piezoelectric actuators in footwear, as described in publication: N. Shenck, J. Paradiso, “Energy Scavenging with Shoe-Mounted Piezoelectrics”, in IEEE Micro, Vol. 21, Issue 3, May/June 2001, pp. 30-42. U.S. Pat. No. 8,841,822, submitted by the same inventor and incorporated herein by reference, describes a piezoelectric generator, which can be used embedded in footwear to generate electricity.
U.S. Pat. No. 6,255,799 describes a means for generating energy, while walking or running, for storage in a rechargeable battery. This means comprises a built in the shoe generator, which utilizes a circular gear assembly to rotate a generator. The same patent describes a second embodiment, which uses fluid reservoirs embedded in the shoes. Pressure changes, resulting from normal walking or running, move the fluid through a closed hydraulic circuit including a narrow channel connecting two reservoirs, thus generating power by rotating a turbine, unidirectionally.
U.S. Pat. No. 7,956,476 describes a system for harvesting energy from footwear movement, which involves compression and decompression of chambers situated in the footwear, such as a back chamber in the heel area and a front chamber in the toe area of the footwear. The chambers are filled with gas, which moves in and out upon compression and decompression of the chambers. The chambers may have elastomer walls which facilitate compressibility and decompressibility of the chambers. The system utilizes a closed pneumatic rectification circuit which directs the gas, through a nozzle, to a micro-turbine generator unit, to rotate the generator unidirectionally. The turbine used is of the radial-flow kind, where the turbine's shaft is placed perpendicular to the direction of the gas stream. For a given airflow, radial-flow turbines require more axial space, particularly for multiple radial-flow turbine configurations. This is because the gas-stream is applied only to a subset of the turbine blades, whereas the axial flow turbines have all their blades absorbing kinetic energy from the working fluid at the same time. More axial space occupying applications are not as suitable in footwear applications, where available space is limited.
Fu et al. publication: H. Fu, K. Cao, R. Xu, M. Bhouri, R. Martinez-Botas, S. G. Kim, E. Yeatman, “Footstep Energy Harvesting Using Strike-Induced Airflow for Human Activity Sensing,” in Wearable and Implantable Body Sensor Networks, IEEE Xplore, 2016, describes and analyzes the efficiency of an air-bladder turbine energy harvester, embedded in shoes, to convert the footstep strikes into electrical energy. When a foot-strike compresses the air-bladder, an airflow is created. The airflow enters an air-pathway, which includes a radial-flow air-turbine, and then exits the pathway from an open end which follows. When the foot is lifted the air-bladder decompresses, which creates an air-flow in the opposite direction. The radial-flow turbine mechanism, as shown in the paper occupies considerable axial space. The research paper concludes that, although the miniature radial-flow turbine was optimized using Computational Fluid Dynamics, still the efficiency of the system was low and not all the airflow power potential was captured. An obvious method to capture the “leaking” airflow would have been to add more radial-flow turbine stages on the airflow pathway. However, this would have occupied even more axial space which would make the mechanism more bulky for use with footwear. Also more stages would require either additional gearing parts and/or generators which may further increase the mechanism's geometric size and cost. Therefore it is clear that there is a need for a more efficient mechanism.
The present invention discloses a pneumatic energy converting mechanism for use with footwear in order to generate electricity from foot-strikes, when the footwear user walks, runs, jumps or, in general exerts pressure with bodily motion on footwear.
The mechanism is embedded in the footwear and comprises at least one air-chamber which has an air-outlet and is disposed to be compressed on foot strike and decompressed when the foot is lifted. The air-chamber(s) can be placed under the foot parts, which exert pressure on the footwear, such as the heel, the ball of the foot, the toes, etc. The mechanism also includes a micro-electrical rotational generator supported within a support air tube which, is pneumatically connected with the air-chamber's outlet with its one end, while having its other end open, so that when the air-chamber is compressed, air flows from the chamber through the support tube and escapes out from the support tube's open end, and when the air-chamber decompresses, air is drawn in from the support tube's open end and flows through the generator area back to the air-chamber.
The micro-electrical generator's shaft coincides with the support tube's longitudinal axis of symmetry, which is the tube's central axis. Attached on this shaft is at least one unidirectional axial-flow turbine. The axial flow turbine blades cut the airflow flowing through the support tube. All blades of each axial-flow turbine are exposed to the airflow absorbing kinetic energy from the air-flow, at the same time, thus efficiently exerting torque rotation to the shaft, while occupying less axial space than if a radial-flow turbine was used. Additional axial flow turbines are added on the same shaft, if airflow “leakage” exists, thus providing with a more cost effective and efficient solution, than utilizing radial-flow turbines with additional generators and/or gearing parts.
The at least one axial-flow turbine, included in the mechanism, is also a unidirectional turbine. That is, independently from the direction of the oscillating airflow (created by the air-chamber compression and decompression), the at least one axial-flow turbine rotates in the same direction. The at least one axial-flow turbine can be of the Wells turbine kind, which possesses the unidirectional property when exposed to an axially oscillating working fluid, and it is well known in the art. Of course, if more than one axial-flow unidirectional turbines are used, these are installed in the same way to provide rotation in the same direction. More than one unidirectional axial-flow turbines can be used in both sides of the generator shaft, provided that the shaft is extended from both sides of the generator.
It is, therefore, an object of the present invention to utilize more than one axial flow micro-turbines and produce rotational torque applied to the same micro-generator, avoiding airflow “leakage”. Applying additional torque to the same micro-generator, results in the capability of handling larger electrical load and producing more electrical power.
It is also an object of the present invention to capture the available airflow power with all micro-turbine blades and NOT only with a small subset of them, as opposed to the radial turbines. This results in less axial space occupation within the footwear.
Yet, it is an object of the present invention to further maximize the benefit of the oscillating airflow, when more than one air-chambers are used. If two or more air-chambers are disposed for a foot-strike from different parts of the foot, such as the heel, the ball of foot or the toes, their compressions and decompressions during walking, jumping etc. are not synchronized and therefore occasionally, airflows created from the compression and decompression of different chambers, at the same time, may travel concurrently in two opposite directions through the same pathway, thus having air particles colliding to each other and therefore partially cancelling the desirable airflow's kinetic energy potential. So, it is an object of the present invention to maximize the benefit of the oscillating airflow energy potential by making the airflow pathways of two or more chambers, independent, that is not interfering with each other, yet having the these independent airflows acting on the same turbines and generator, thus providing a more efficient electrical power generation.
The present disclosure describes a pneumatic electricity generation mechanism embedded in footwear. The mechanism includes at least one air-chamber with an outlet, which is placed so that it is compressed by the foot, while walking running, jumping and in general when the foot applies pressure, such as the pressure exerted on the footwear by the heel or the ball of the foot. When the air chamber is compressed, an airflow exits the air chamber through its outlet. When the foot is lifted the air-chamber decompresses. When the air chamber decompresses an air flow enters the air chamber through the outlet, at the opposite direction from the airflow created during the air-chamber compression. The air-chamber can be made by an elastomeric material such as the one used for air-bulbs in sphygmomanometers, so that after compression and during decompression the air-chamber returns to the form it had before compression. To return to the uncompressed form, the air-chamber may further contain decompression means, such as a sponge or flexible foam material or flexible polyurethane foam, which can be compressed on compression and expand back into its initial shape after compression, pushing the internal air chamber walls to return to the uncompressed form; or springs, placed inside the air chamber, which can be compressed and expand back to their initial uncompressed length or state, during decompression, thus pushing the air-chamber's walls, internally, back to the uncompressed form.
Axial-flow micro-turbines 65 and 70 are additionally of the unidirectional kind, that is, they rotate always in the same direction independently from the direction of the working fluid that crosses and sets in rotation the turbine blades. Axial-fowl turbines are the Wells turbines, which are well known in the art. Micro-turbines 65 and 70 are placed within the support tube 50 to rotate freely without touching the support tube wall. The micro-turbines are attached on the generator's rotor shaft, as shown in more detail in
The preferred embodiment shown in
The preferred embodiment of
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