Burning calories and generating electricity at the same time surely has to be one of the best answers to two of the biggest challenges faced by different societies across the globe: generating clean energy and tackling the obesity pandemic.
And this is what the folks at the Texas State University are doing: they are getting students and faculty members to generate electricity by working out.
According to a story on YNN Austin (includes video) the gym at the university is equipped with machines that are geared up to generate electricity.
“The rotational energy here runs a generator and then it’s creating DC power that is converted by an inverter on the wall into AC power,†Steve Souku, of Texas State University, told YNN.
Sweden
Texas University is not the only place where the human body is being used to generate alternative energy.
A Swedish train station is tapping the body heat generated by 250,000 daily commuters to heat a building next door. It works like this: the surplus body heat is captured by the station’s ventilation system and used to heat water, before being pumped to the building across the street.
Meanwhile in the U.S., MIT researchers are working on a concept called crowd farm to generate electricity from populated places. The fact is, a single human step can power two 60-watt light bulbs for one second; it’s easy to visualize how much energy is wasted from human motion because we simply don’t convert all this effort into power.
Let’s think about it – it could be a fairly significant source of power … from and back to the people!
(Via Ivanhoe.com)
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