Engineers Devise a Way To Harvest Wind Energy From Trees (vice.com)
derekmead writes: Harvesting electrical power from vibrations or other mechanical stress is pretty easy. Turns out all it really takes is a bit of crystal or ceramic material and a couple of wires and, there you go, piezoelectricity. As stress is applied to the material, charge accumulates, which can then be shuttled away to do useful work. The classic example is an electric lighter, in which a spring-loaded hammer smacks a crystal, producing a spark. Another example is described in a new paper in the Journal of Sound and Vibration, courtesy of engineers at Ohio State's Laboratory of Sound and Vibration Research. The basic idea behind the energy harvesting platform: exploit the natural internal resonances of trees within tiny artificial forests capable of generating enough voltage to power sensors and structural monitoring systems.
Not after you've covered it in solar cells, it doesn't.
Engineers Devise a Way To Harvest Wind Energy From Trees
Wow. I know Slashdot tends to lag behind the other news sites, but this is ridiculous.
Sorry, meant to make a smart remark about windmills there. It's ruined now. I suck. Sorry, everyone.
If you can read that techno-babble, you either wrote for The Big Bang Theory or you were a technical advisor.
*** Don't be dull.***
I've always wondered why nobody did this with the 'soundwalls' that parallel every urban highway today - all you'd be taking is sound energy, so essentially it would even perhaps improve their sound-deadening qualities, while powering a nearby street light or two.
-Styopa
I'd exploit the "natural internal resonances of trees" by chopping them down, burning them in a furnace, boiling water to steam, and driving a turbogenerator with the steam. Then you're talking real power; none of this namby-pamby tiny artificial forest electron jiggling nonsense.
Left MS Windows for Linux Mint and never looked back!
Vote for Bernie in 2016!