Award-winning device harvests energy from railway track vibrations - MeraForum Community.No 1 Pakistani Forum Community

MeraForum Community.No 1 Pakistani Forum Community

link| link| link| link| link| link| link| link| link| link| link| link| link | link | link | link | link | link | link | link | link | link | link | link | link | link | link | link | link | link | link | link| link| link| link| link| link| link| link| link| link| link| link| link| link| link| link| link| link| link| link| link| link| link| link| link| link| link| link| link| link| link| link| link| link| link| link| link|
MeraForum Community.No 1 Pakistani Forum Community » The World of Information » Science & Technology » Award-winning device harvests energy from railway track vibrations
Science & Technology Share science and technology stuffs here

Advertisement
 
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
Prev Previous Post   Next Post Next
(#1)
Old
(‘“*JiĢäR*”’) (‘“*JiĢäR*”’) is offline
 


Posts: 43,615
My Photos: ()
Country:
Star Sign:
Join Date: Jul 2010
Location: © ℓ ợ Ş ệ → тớ → µг ↔ ♥
Gender: Male
Good Award-winning device harvests energy from railway track vibrations - >>   Show Printable Version  Show Printable Version   Email this Page  Email this Page   12-19-2012, 11:14 AM



Much of the abundant mechanical energy around us is irregular and oscillatory and can be somewhat difficult to efficiently tap into. Typical energy harvesting systems tend to be built for low power applications in the milliwatts range but researchers from New York's Stony Brook University have developed a new patent-pending electromagnetic energy harvester capable of harnessing the vibrations of a locomotive thundering down a stretch of track to power signal lights, structural monitoring systems or even track switches.

As a train rolls down the track, the load it exerts on the track causes vertical deflection. This displacement could engage a regenerative device like an electromagnetic harvester and generate enough power to operate local railway applications, which is especially useful in remote areas where electrification is not cost effective. Harvesting such energy is much more efficient with regular, unidirectional motion, but track vibrations caused by a moving train are pulse-like, bidirectional and somewhat erratic.

Professor Lei Zuo and graduate students Gopinath Reddy Penamalli, Teng Lin and John Wang from the University's Department of Mechanical Engineering claim to have designed a new harvester capable of converting irregular, oscillatory rail track vibrations into regulated unidirectional rotational motion, similar to the way that an electric voltage rectifier converts AC voltage into DC.

"The U.S. has the longest rail tracks in the world, approximately 140,700 miles; that are often in remote areas," said Professor Zuo. "It is very important but also very costly to power the track-side electrical infrastructure, such as the signal lights, cross gates, track switches and monitoring sensors. Our invention (the Mechanical Motion Rectifier based Railroad Energy Harvester) can harness 200 watts of electric energy from train-induced track deflections to power the track-side electrical devices. By using two one-way clutches, the innovative mechanical motion rectifier converts the irregular up-and-down vibration motion into unidirectional rotation of the generator, thus breaking the fundamental challenge of vibration energy harvesting and offering significant advantages of high efficiency and high reliability."

Impact forces from repeated loading/unloading are also said to be reduced thanks to the incorporation of a flywheel to stabilize the generator. According to Professor Zuo, the technology enables a generator to rotate in one direction with relative steady speed in a more efficient speed region, and changes the negative influence of motion inertia into a positive, thereby reducing mechanical stress and increasing system reliability. Bench testing of system prototypes has resulted in mechanical efficiency of between 55 and 72 percent.

"Such a design not only avoids the challenges of friction and impact induced by oscillation motion, but also enables us to make full use of the pulse-like features of track vibration to harvest more energy," he said.

Professor Zuo estimates that the implementation of such a device could save more than US$10 million in trackside power supply costs for the New York State area alone, together with a reduction of 3,000 tons of carbon dioxide every year.

"If 10,000 units of 200 watt harvesters are deployed in New York State with 20 percent duty cycle, the energy benefits will be 400,000 watts, or 3.5 x 10^6 kWh per year," he explained. "At an average retail price $0.14 per kWh of electricity for the transportation sector, this annual electricity saving will be half a million US dollars in New York State alone."

The team was awarded the "Best Application of Energy Harvesting" at the 3rd Energy Harvesting and Wireless Sensor Networks USA awards held in Washington on November 7 – 8, and has already licensed the technology to Electric Truck/Harvest NRG for commercialization.

Source: Department of Mechanical Engineering, Stony Brook University

 



დ∫დ→◄●♥●►↔ǺήĐằŽ~◊Ệ◊~ßάΫǻЙ↔◄●♥●►←დ∫დ




Reply With Quote Share on facebook
Sponsored Links
 

Bookmarks

Tags
awardwinning, device, energy, harvests, railway, track, vibrations

Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off

Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
<><> Creative Energy <><> Mf Great Power General Discussion 12 12-01-2012 03:40 PM
AwarD WinninG PhotograpH‏ ShahTaJ Pics And Images 11 12-03-2011 06:41 PM
World's complicated railway track AYAZ Pics And Images 13 12-02-2011 09:06 PM
Award winning & funny Indian ad for Glycodin (¯*♥¤»ƙɧՄՏɧՅԾԾ«¤♥*¯) Funny Videos 5 05-29-2011 12:01 AM


All times are GMT +5. The time now is 05:52 PM.
Powered by vBulletin®
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.

All the logos and copyrights are the property of their respective owners. All stuff found on this site is posted by members / users and displayed here as they are believed to be in the "public domain". If you are the rightful owner of any content posted here, and object to them being displayed, please contact us and it will be removed promptly.

Nav Item BG