The Ubiquitous LED Becomes More Ubiquitous 109
LiberalApplication writes "Piezoelectric generators have been mentioned here before, regarding the military's plan to integrate them into the heels of boots for the purposes of harvesting electricity from the cumulative stompage of a soldier, but now someone has come up with the idea to combine them with LEDs and cast the entire assembly into a little block of resin. Well, a stick, really. If you were getting tired of seeing little blinky lights everywhere, you ain't seen nothing yet."
Lots of uses for Piezoelectric (Score:1, Informative)
But seriously, PiezoElectric power will likely be used as a parasitic power source for lots of small devices. Self-charging laptops [slashdot.org], Forever Flashlights [thinkgeek.com], etc. It might be the only way to power nanoscale devices [smalltimes.com] like found in The Diamond Age [slashdot.org]
Re:Lots of uses for Piezoelectric (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Lots of uses for Piezoelectric (Score:3, Funny)
Ummm, let me guess....
One watt of sound?
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Re:Lots of uses for Piezoelectric (Score:2)
Re:Lots of uses for Piezoelectric (Score:2)
Re:Lots of uses for Piezoelectric (Score:1, Flamebait)
"1 watt of sound energy"? Does your exceptional understanding of physics extend to the difference between power and energy? :-)
Re:Lots of uses for Piezoelectric (Score:2)
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Re:Lots of uses for Piezoelectric (Score:2)
Re:Lots of uses for Piezoelectric (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Lots of uses for Piezoelectric (Score:1)
Fortunately I always save the last bullet for myself.
lol
Bicycles... (Score:4, Interesting)
I'd love to get a set of these and attach them to the spokes on my bicycle wheels. Swirly rainbow of light zooming across the dark.
No driver could miss me then.
Re:Bicycles... (Score:4, Insightful)
Actually, on a smooth road these wouldn't work; they require a cycle of compression and decompression to generate power - you'd want nice hard tires and a bumpy road to shake the suckers up.
It would be interesting to know just how vigourously they need to be jostled to generate a given luminosity.
Re:Bicycles... (Score:2)
maybe on the pedals? A gentle rotation motion prolly wouldn't work would it.. Yes, I didn't re
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Bicycles... (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Bicycles... (Score:5, Funny)
Actually, I thought you'd rather want him to miss you
Re:Bicycles... (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Bicycles... (Score:1)
Re:Bicycles... (Score:1)
Re:Bicycles... (Score:2)
Bikes are usually part of regular traffic, and are supposed to stay on the road, but most bike laws are not heavily enforced. It's illegal to ride your bike on a sidewalk, but you will usually only get a ticket if you are a nusance, biking way too fast or if the sidewalk is crowded. The police usually have better things to do, and most of them understand that bicylists sometimes need to bend the
Cool! (Score:5, Interesting)
[ot] tritium?!? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:[ot] tritium?!? (Score:5, Informative)
Sure, I wouldn't give one to my kids (which I'm done having, btw), but it's safe. What were those military lights called? Watchlights? Watchglasses? Whatever -- they were regarded as safe, I believe.
Re:[ot] tritium?!? (Score:5, Informative)
Gaseous tritium is absolutely fine, it decays by beta emission - but the electron is so unenergetic that it can't even penetrate skin.
However, if the tritium oxidises, it becomes heavy water which can get directly absorbed by one's lungs. In which case, it pases through the body after a few days in the standard way
The safe dose for gaseous tritium is 10s of thousands of times higher than that for oxidised tritium; if you did crack one of those vials, I doubt much harm would come to you at all. Any tritium released into the atmosphere will quickly diffuse into space [also the reason why there's precious little atmospheric hydrogen]...
Re:[ot] tritium?!? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:[ot] tritium?!? (Score:1)
Re:glowrings (Score:1, Informative)
http://www.ameriglo.net/pages/locationmarkers.h
Re:Cool! (Score:2, Interesting)
It uses the same traser trademark.
I have a green one, it's encapsulated into a teardropped shaped lump of plastic. It's on my keyring and it's about as bright as my clock radio at night.
I have no relation to www.unitednuclear.com other than being a happy customer.
Re:Cool! (Score:3, Informative)
targets (Score:4, Funny)
Oh yeah... (Score:2)
Jurassic Park (Score:4, Interesting)
63 million years from now, some huckster is going to have an amusement park featuring cloned glowing lights.
Embedded into sidewalks (Score:3, Interesting)
=Brian
Re:Embedded into sidewalks (Score:4, Interesting)
That might make for a fun private path to a house or something, but certainly not on a city street where it'd A) cost taxpayers more and B) get covered with gum anyway.
I'd think you'd see this as a new material for a dance floor before most other novelty surface applications.
mod this up! (Score:1)
Re:Embedded into sidewalks (Score:1)
Alternately... (Score:2)
Re:Embedded into something ELSE (Score:2)
Re:Embedded into something ELSE (Score:1)
DDR panels already light up when the player steps on them during game play.
Re:Embedded into sidewalks (Score:3, Interesting)
If you can make the unit sufficiently small, so that you can fit tens of them per inch, embedding a layer of them into a sidewalk or other pedestrian surface would have people leaving glowing footprints, which could be used as a theming enhancement in amusement parks, dance floors,
Re:Embedded into sidewalks (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Embedded into sidewalks (Score:2)
Re:Embedded into sidewalks (Score:1)
You damn pedophile. I'm telling.
Blinking LEDs on Combat boots? (Score:4, Funny)
I wonder if they will resemble these. [nordstrom.com]
Concerts... (Score:5, Interesting)
Hell, disperse the little ones in the crowd and turn the whole place into a giant pulsating light...
Re:Concerts... (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Concerts... (Score:2)
Hey, that's a pretty cool idea. While not on the drumline of my high-school marching band (I played trumpet in the brass line), I imagine such a thing would have been well-received during a half-time show.
The frivolous uses of these little gizmos are almost unlimited. :)
Re:Concerts... (Score:3, Funny)
Public announcement! You now have 1 year if you want US patent protection, and you are out of luck if you wanted international.
Children's Shoes (Score:1, Interesting)
Re:Children's Shoes (Score:5, Informative)
I thought of those when I first read the "in the heels of soldier's boots" in the story.
Cops loved it when crime suspects wearing those hip shoes tried to sneak away into the night.
Re:Children's Shoes (Score:1)
Re:Children's Shoes (Score:1)
Maybe it was in regards to Juvenile-offender-sized shoes.
No more "blackouts" (Score:4, Interesting)
These things (or rather, an application of ther technology) would make amazing emergency lighting in offices or homes. Heck, even in non-emergency situations. Perhaps a walkway with peizo-electric flagstones to power the lights along its path?
I wonder how much power could be obtained from the highways and biways of America? All those cars racing over millions of little generators all day long should produce a pretty goo amount of electricity, I'd imagine. It would almost make up for the ridiculous cost of burning all those fossil fuels in the first place.
Re:No more "blackouts" (Score:3, Insightful)
B: You're kinda missing the whole "conservation of energy" thing. It could never come close to making up the difference.
C: After reading the article, it's clear that converting vibration into current will never create a large ammount of electricity. It WILL create small ammounts just about anyplace, allowing electronics to go without a battery or powercord. Pizo in the road might for various sensors to be included into a kind of "smart streets" (as opposed to "street smarts"). The
Re:No more "blackouts" (Score:2)
Probably so, but the energy produced would never even come close to offsetting the price of the generators.
Instead lets put windmills on top of all the cars, that way they can charge themselves while they drive down the highway! (*)
(* Yes, I know, its a joke.)
Conservation of energy, please... (Score:3, Interesting)
No, because the highway doesn't flex; the tires do. Since it doesn't move, there is no work done. There is a very small amount of heat imparted on the roadway, but not very much. OK, so maybe you make the highway segmented, and use the weight of the car? Ok, the car still has to climb up t
Re:Conservation of energy, please... (Score:2, Informative)
Re:No more "blackouts" (Score:2)
search for Self-Luminous Exit Signs, they'vc been about for a few years in the USA
Lost in the translation? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Lost in the translation? (Score:1)
Re:Lost in the translation? (Score:1)
Re:Lost in the translation? (Score:3, Insightful)
Thus the pile of them pictured in the last link that are still glowing despite being apparently motionless, probably dumped from a shaken bucketful.
Re:Lost in the translation? (Score:1)
Re:Lost in the translation? (Score:4, Informative)
Tim
Re:Lost in the translation? (Score:1)
Re:Lost in the translation? (Score:3, Informative)
Tim
Re:Lost in the translation? (Score:3, Interesting)
You can get a nice healthy spark from those things, which probably has to have a good voltage to jump across the air like that, but the amperage must be pretty low or they'd be deadly =D
Re:Lost in the translation? (Score:2)
It might be right (Score:1)
As for the LED's: A LED might well be able to handle this much current. Although continous current should not exceed around 20 mA on most models, most LED's can handle short peak currents just fine.
For a viewer, it would be difficult to spot the difference in a 1 ms 1 A flash and a 10 ms 100 mA flash.
Recent LEDs have also been produced with phosphors in them to make specific colors (and white). These phosphors can also help to buffer the peak of energy and emit
Re:It might be right (Score:2)
But, that was my idea! (Score:3, Insightful)
I had an idea for luminous items in beverages before, but then I envisioned glowing beads that were neutrally buoyant so that any carbonation in the beverage would cause them to continously move around. I was going to call them "fireflies" and market them to trendy bars.
Of course they'd either have to be safe for consumption or have the beverage container's opening be filtered with a mesh so they couldn't be swallowed.
Think glowing skittlebrau.
Re:But, that was my idea! (Score:1)
Re:But, that was my idea! (Score:2, Informative)
Of course they'd either have to be safe for consumption or have the beverage container's opening be filtered with a mesh so they couldn't be swallowed.
Look up the Japanese soft drink Lamune. It used a particularly unique design in which the drink was sealed by a marble stuck in the neck of the bottle. To open you pushed the marble down into the bottle. If you wanted to save a little for later you could flip the bottle upside down and suck on it, the marble would fall down and reseal the bottle.
Re:But, that was my idea! (Score:2)
K2 skis and airplane wings had these years ago (Score:5, Interesting)
they got the idea from the airforce who uses this idea to damp wing vibration.
in both cases active vibration is lighter weight than passive damping materials. (unfortunately the K2s are still heavy as sin, so really it was a gimmick aimed at nerds. still it worked--I bought the skis!)
Solar powered LED in a calculator (Score:5, Interesting)
Toys (Score:3, Insightful)
But really, aren't these most likely to show up as toys ( both for children and rave-going tripsters ) ? At least on a consumer level, I'm having a hard time thinking of other good applications.
Of course, the article was a little thin, and I'm left asking questions.
How much light do these generate? I take it all the light-up kid's shoes we see have batteries in them, right? These won't compare to -or work for- that kind of thing... how many applications require that the light source _always_ works and doesn't need to be very bright ? Basically, I'm wondering if these won't be adopted too well because battery-based solutions will "outshine" them. And with LEDs, batteries last quite a long time. I know my son outgrows his light-up shoes before they stop lighting up...
80's flashback (Score:1)
Or not
10 Amps ?? (Score:2, Insightful)
The Light Emitting Stick generates a current of up to about 10A
10 Amps ?? Is it just me or does this seem a little high to anyone?
Is Lidar "hard" scifi? (Score:2)
Am I somewhat correct?
I had an idea... (Score:2)
OT (Score:1)
I though cyclists rear lights were "aim car here" markers!
Big deal (Score:2)
Re:Big deal (Score:3, Interesting)
There are lots of things in this world that are designed to be in motion. Some of them naturally lend themselves to being made with piezoelectri
Those blinkin' boots-boots-boots-boots... (Score:3, Interesting)
(Boots-boots-boots-boots-movin' up an' down again);
Men-men-men-men-men go mad with watchin' 'em,
An' there's no discharge in the war !
'Tain`t-so-bad-by-day because o' company,
But night-brings-long-strings-o' forty thousand million
Boots-boots-boots-boots-movin' up an' down again
There's no discharge in the war !
--Rudyard Kipling, "Boots"
Now if those boots had had little blinking lights in them...