Good Vibrations Generate Electricity

PARTS LIST: Relying on the piezoelectric effect, a phenomenon in which certain crystals and other materials generate electricity when twisted or flexed, this new device harvests energy from tiny vibrations.
(Image credit: ISNS)

A new device that can harvest useful energy from extremely tiny vibrations may allow new ways to power remote electronic devices with batteries that need replacing less often, or are actually self-charging. The "vibration-to-electricity" device could capture up to 10 times more energy than is possible with the conventional device.

Scientists at the Virginia Polytechnic Institute in Blacksburg, Va., used a process well known in science called the "piezoelectric" effect, a phenomenon in which certain crystals and other materials, when twisted or flexed, actually generate electricity. The new device increases the range of vibration frequencies from which energy can be captured. Conventional "piezo-generators" only efficiently harvest energy at certain frequencies, severely limiting the amount of power they can capture and generate.

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