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MIT Undergrads Create Shock Absorber That Generates Energy

By David Chandler, MIT
2009-02-23 00:00:00.0   |   24 Comments

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"Simply put -- we want this technology on every heavy-truck, military vehicle and consumer hybrid on the road."

-- Shakeel Avadhany, MIT Senior
24 Reader Comments
Comment
1 of 24
2009-02-23
Brilliant! Simple application idea!
I guess it's no surprise that MIT thought of it first.
There's going to be huge application for off-road vehicles. These inventors are going to be rich from royalties - just think of the number of off-road vehicles and companies making them around the world.
Comment
2 of 24
2009-02-24
I like the idea of using the oil to drive a turbine. I wonder if any other approaches were considered such as pure electrical damping. For example, I have a flashlight that generates electricity when it is shaken. A small cylindrical rare earth magnet travels up and down through a hollow plastic tube. A coil of fine very fine wire is wound around the center, and the induced current is used to charge a small battery.
Comment
3 of 24
Domestic or district power generation: attach the shock absorbers to something big that flaps in the wind but looks OK and doesn't move too fast for safety - wall panels, solar panels, your garden fence, a tall decorative object, the roof...
Comment
4 of 24
2009-02-25
How soon can I get a pair for my contractor's truck. I'm getting it set up to run my tools off of a battery and solar at the moment, and it seems to me that this would be a very sleek and much more simple solution than lugging around the solar panel, not to mention that it would always work.
Comment
5 of 24
"Better yet put a mini windmill on the roof, and while you are going along, it makes electricity....Seems to me we put all these ideas together including putting a solar panel on the trunk.....we have an electirc car hybrid that can really go places now........"

Please tell me you are not serious. MIT's idea is quite sound - this IS energy that is otherwise being wasted. Your ideas are, needless to say, ridiculous. It's hard to tell if you are trying to make a point or just being frivolous.
Comment
6 of 24
2009-02-25
I concur with Geoffrey Gunning. I hope Dominic Jermano was only kidding when he suggested a wind turbine atop a vehicle. I wonder why he did not think of a recovering energy from a 3-feet diameter wind turbine mounted on top of his helmet, which charges a 50 lb battery that he carries in his backpack, when he walks at 10 miles/hour. This will solve several problems - obesity, energy security, traffic jams, etc. But the food crisis will be deepened.
Comment
7 of 24
Use then on trains. Particularly on passenger and freight trains running on bumpy tracks of the US railroad would be very effective. The electricity can be used for running them.
Comment
8 of 24
Wow!! What a great thing for a purly electric car to put this otherwise wasted energy back into the battery.

I assume the wind turbine chaps above, realize the difference between recovering bounce energy and forward motion energy. Nice physics joke if they are joking???
Comment
9 of 24
2009-02-25
The shocks sound like a good idea because:
1. The amount of energy is significant.
2. A vehicle needs shocks anyway, so the incremental cost is the amount above a stardard shock.
3. It utilizes energy that would otherwise be wasted.
4. It extends the range of the vehicle. (A problem for pure electric vehicles and military vehicles where a supply chain is needed for fuel.)
Comment
10 of 24
2009-02-25
Engineering professors have been making off-handed comments about things like these shock absorbers for at least 25 years--it's only now that it seems maybe it will make market sense--that's why the kids went out and did it. It's not so much about new ideas, but the right environment to realize them.....

Someone please explain to Dominic about Conservation of Energy and turbulence/drag against direction of motion v. bouncing perpendicular to motion.
Comment
11 of 24
Absolutely a brilliant idea and a wonderful intergration. It is the simple and even little ideas like this that bit by bit, intergration by intergration that make efficient vehicles possible. Let us not be too hard on the windmill, it could produce positive energy via the vectored winds blowing latterally to the direction of travel and keep things charged while parked! Too bad about the drag though.
Comment
12 of 24
Solar panels on the roof of hybrids is coming on the Toyota Prius, I believe the 2010 model. They are putting thin film on there to help with power generation.
Comment
13 of 24
Dominic should learn how to spell.
Comment
14 of 24
Is that the best you can do W Plaisted? bounce....... As if you never made a typo, right?

And AM...I am fully aware of conservation of energy.....but you people make it seem like I am connecting a parachute to the back of my car.. My comment is a comparison to electrical creation showing electricity can be procured from many ways.....What is wrong with that?
Comment
15 of 24
To Dominic Jermano: Why don't you stick to YouTube? You could get lots of "LOL's" etc. there. You are wasting your talents here. Spare us - please.
Comment
16 of 24
Well isn't that brilliant! Why not make the 4 wheels become generators, so when they spin of course without any fricition they will produce electricity?

Why not place a fan spinning rotor on the tailpipe, so as exhaust is coming out, it will spin the rotor that is really a generator to make electricity?

Better yet put a small handsize mini windmill on the roof, and while you are going along, it makes electricity.?...Seems to me we put all these ideas together including putting a solar panel on the trunk.....we have an electric car hybrid that can really go places now........

HAaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa.

Dominic
Comment
17 of 24
... You guys have no imagination. The comment is to point out that so many of these ideas for cars have been around for quite some time. Shock Absorbers creating energy is nothing new... I can make any fabric material bounce in the wind to make electricity too.. The 3' foot turbine is a bit large KMC....because a handsize will work just as well...And who needs such heavy batteries, when I can make electicity simply by walking, and moving my legs with my new walking generator.......I could make electricity sleeping in bed, everytime I roll over I generate voltage....or hookup a generator to my rocking chair, or hook one up to my kitchen faucet, or shower, or hook one up to my door. Or hook one up to my stove so when I boil water I can make electricty. I know ....hook one up to my bike, so it will make electricity when I peddle. OR hook one up to my toilet, so everytime I flush it makes electricity, and when it refills too.
Or how about making a basketball battery generator....Everytime I bounce the ball it creates energy inside.....and I can plug things into my basketball for energy. What a great idea........

Wish I was an MIT'er.

Dom
Comment
18 of 24
Mr. Gunning....sorry for your reply... But I am just as entitled as anyone else to make comments....and who says so? Try America....freedom of speech.


.
Comment
19 of 24
To Dominic Jermano: Go ahead - you are free to make a fool of yourself.
Comment
20 of 24
2009-02-28
Some of these ideas are already being used.
There is a guy that will convert cars like he did on an old toyota pickup. There is only an electric motor. The body raise and there are batteries underneath. The solar panel on the truck bed followes the sun. It can be pluged in and if all else fails a gas motor turns a generator to charge the batteries.

They have made a bicycle that charges a battery and then a motor helps you up hills.
Comment
21 of 24
2009-02-28
Hitoshi Maruyama said:
"Use then on trains. Particularly on passenger and freight trains running on bumpy tracks of the US railroad would be very effective. The electricity can be used for running them".

Great idea. One of the greatest potentials for efficiency gains in US energy consumption lies in converting our reliance on road and air transport to rail. New train lines should be electric or MagLev and otherwise, use these shocks on our, yes, bumpy majority of tracks.
Japan's system is a marvel. The Bullet Train (Shinkanzen) is a gas to ride and has 100% safety record over decades. Most of Japan's cars are also much smaller.
As we enter the decline side of peak oil, total global energy supply will also decline-wind, solar, geothermal, are the future but unlikely, in many's opinion, to reach the levels of fossil fuels. Therefore, the greater a society's efficiency the greater it's potential prosperity.
Jesse Hunter - Sunergy Systems
Comment
22 of 24
2009-03-03
As you absorb energy, in whatever fashion, from random impulses, you have to first be able to damp a 4 wheeled vehicle appropriately for a smooth ride, safety and fuel economy. Secondly, you must recover as much energy as possible to redirect it when needed. On a short time scale, forward thrust and shock damping-factor (or applied force-factor) could be manipulated for maximum mileage efficiency (probably with large scale capacitors). Over a longer time span, fast charging batteries would be beneficial. With the use of piezoelectric materials in shocks for sensing, damping, and generation....what an algorithm that would be!! Ideas???
Comment
23 of 24
"In their testing so far, the students found that in a 6-shock heavy truck, each shock absorber could generate up to an average of 1 kW on a standard road "

I'm wondering what they exactly mean by up to an average ? That seems ambiguous to me. i.e. what is the actual average ? Surely they have calculated that by now. Up to could be anything ranging from 0 kW to 1 kW but that in itself is not an average, that is a range. The average would be 500 Watts based on that up to range.
Comment
24 of 24
http://my.nowpublic.com/world/my-car-wind-generator-car

Eat your hearts out.......

HA. Ha....a..
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