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Topic Name: More power from bumps in the road : energy-harvesting shock absorbers
Category: Mechanical
Research persons: Shakeel Avadhany,Zack Anderson,Prof. Yet-Ming Chiang
Location: Cambridge, United States
Details
A team of MIT undergraduate students has invented a shock absorber that
harnesses energy from small bumps in the road, generating electricity while it
smoothes the ride more effectively than conventional shocks. The students hope
to initially find customers among companies that operate large fleets of heavy
vehicles. They have already drawn interest from the U.S. military and several
truck manufacturers.
Senior Shakeel Avadhany and his teammates say they can produce up to a 10
percent improvement in overall vehicle fuel efficiency by using the regenerative
shock absorbers. The company that produces Humvees for the army, and is
currently working on development of the next-generation version of the
all-purpose vehicle, is interested enough to have loaned them a vehicle for
testing purposes.
The project came about because "we wanted to figure out where energy is being
wasted in a vehicle," senior Zack Anderson explains. Some hybrid cars already do
a good job of recovering the energy from braking, so the team looked elsewhere,
and quickly homed in on the suspension.
They began by renting a variety of different car models, outfitting the
suspension with sensors to determine the energy potential, and driving around
with a laptop computer recording the sensor data. Their tests showed "a
significant amount of energy" was being wasted in conventional suspension
systems, Anderson says, "especially for heavy vehicles."
Once they realized the possibilities, the students set about building a
prototype system to harness the wasted power. Their prototype shock absorbers
use a hydraulic system that forces fluid through a turbine attached to a
generator. The system is controlled by an active electronic system that
optimizes the damping, providing a smoother ride than conventional shocks while
generating electricity to recharge the batteries or operate electrical
equipment.
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
-- enough power to completely displace the large alternator load in heavy trucks
and military vehicles, and in some cases even run accessory devices such as
hybrid trailer refrigeration units.
They filed for a patent last year and formed a company, called Levant Power
Corp., to develop and commercialize the product. They are currently doing a
series of tests with their converted Humvee to optimize the system's efficiency.
They hope their technology will help give an edge to the military vehicle
company in securing the expected $40 billion contract for the new army vehicle
called the Joint Light Tactical Vehicle, or JLTV.
"They see it as something that's going to be a differentiator" in the quest
for that lucrative contract, says Avadhany. He adds, "it is a completely new
paradigm of damping."
"This is a disruptive technology," Anderson says. "It's a game-changer."
"Simply put -- we want this technology on every heavy-truck, military vehicle
and consumer hybrid on the road," Avadhany says.
The team has received help from
MIT's Venture Mentoring Service, and has been
advised by Yet-Ming Chiang, the Kyocera Professor of Ceramics in the Department
of Materials Science and Engineering and founder of A123 Systems, a supplier of
high-power lithium-ion batteries.
Not only would improved fuel efficiency be a big plus for the army by
requiring less stockpiling and transportation of fuel into the war zone, but the
better ride produced by the actively controlled shock absorbers make for safer
handling, the students say. "If it's a smoother ride, you can go over the
terrain faster," says Anderson.
The new shocks also have a fail-safe feature: If the electronics fail for any
reason, the system simply acts like a regular shock absorber.
The group, which also includes senior Zachary Jackowski and alumni Paul Abel
'08, Ryan Bavetta '07 and Vladimir Tarasov '08, plans to have a final,
fine-tuned version of the device ready this summer. Then they will start talking
to potential big customers. For example, they have calculated that a company
such as Wal-Mart could save $13 million a year in fuel costs by converting its
fleet of trucks.
About the Researcher :
1. Shakeel Avadhany
Student of MIT
2. Zack Anderson
Student of MIT
3. Yet-Ming Chiang
Kyocera Professor of Ceramics
SB Materials Science and Engineering, MIT, 1980
ScD Ceramics, MIT, 1985
Prof. Chiang's research focuses on the design, synthesis, and
characterization of advanced inorganic materials and related devices. Current
topics include new cathode and anode materials for lithium ion batteries, phase
transformations in electroactive materials, electrochemical device design,
electrochemical-to-mechanical energy conversion, self-assembling colloids, and
the stability and defect chemical properties of interfaces in inorganic
materials.
Contact information of Prof. Chian':
Room 13-4086, 77 Mass. Ave., Cambridge, MA 02139
617-253-6471 (phone) 617-253-6201 (fax)
ychiang@mit.edu
| Tags: |
shock absorbe - fuel efficiency - |
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