The human body is an incredible source of thermal energy that is mostly wasted each day. With the right technology, we can actually harness our body heat and convert it into usable electricity to power small devices. This concept is known as human body thermoelectric energy harvesting.
In this comprehensive guide, I will explain everything you need to know about using your own body heat to produce clean energy.
How Thermoelectric Generators Work
Thermoelectric generators (TEGs) are solid-state devices that convert a temperature gradient into electricity. They operate on the Seebeck effect, which states that when two dissimilar metals or semiconductors are connected at two junctions held at different temperatures, an electrical voltage is produced.
The key components in a TEG are:
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N-type and P-type semiconductor materials - These are usually bismuth telluride or antimony telluride. They have different electrical properties.
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Thermocouples - Each couple consists of an n-type and p-type pellet connected electrically in series and thermally in parallel.
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Ceramic plates - These hold the thermocouples in place and provide electrical insulation while enabling heat flow.
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Heat sinks and fins - These dissipate heat from the cold side.
When one side of the TEG is heated (the hot junction) while the other is cooled (the cold junction), charge carriers in the semiconductors diffuse from the hot to the cold side, generating a voltage. The greater the temperature difference, the higher the voltage produced.
TEGs have no moving parts, require no maintenance, and can last for years, making them highly reliable. The only inputs they need are a heat source and a heat sink.
Harnessing Human Body Heat
The average human body temperature is 98.6°F (37°C). With vigorous activity such as exercise, our skin temperature can reach 104°F (40°C). This presents an ideal heat source that can be harvested by attaching TEGs onto the skin.
Some key ways body heat can be utilized are:
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Wrist watches - A TEG taped onto the back of a watch can generate electricity from the heat of the wrist. Enough power is produced to continuously run low energy electronics like LCDs. This eliminates the need for watch batteries.
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Smartphones and gadgets - Small TEGs integrated into phone cases and accessories can trickle charge batteries over time. This extends the battery life of portable electronics.
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Military gear - Soldiers carry heavy batteries to power radios, GPS, lights, and other gear. Wearable TEGs can reduce this battery burden and even allow self-charging in the field.
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Medical devices - Implanted TEGs running on body heat can enable self-powered pacemakers, health monitors, and neurostimulators that don't require charging or batteries.
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Clothing - Integrating thin, flexible TEGs into clothing allows generating electricity to power wearable electronics like fitness trackers and AR glasses.
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Vehicles - Seat-based TEGs can produce auxiliary power in cars by harvesting waste heat from passengers. This can help run accessories and reduce load on the engine.
Key Factors That Affect Power Output
Several important factors determine how much usable electricity can be harvested from human body heat using TEGs:
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Temperature difference (ΔT) - The greater the temperature gradient between the hot and cold TEG junctions, the higher the voltage generated. Larger ΔT values produce exponentially more power.
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Thermal resistance - Lower contact thermal resistance allows more heat to transfer into the TEG and improves energy conversion efficiency. Thermal interface materials like graphene help reduce resistance.
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TEG surface area - More surface contact area with the skin improves heat absorption and increases power density (W/cm2). Large, flat TEGs optimize this.
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Semiconductor material - Advanced materials like bismuth antimony telluride alloys can achieve 5-10% conversion efficiency or more. This is double that of older telluride alloys.
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Power optimization - DC-DC converters and maximum power point tracking helps maintain peak electrical power output regardless of varying temperature and load conditions.
Estimating the Power Output
As a rough estimate, a 1 cm x 1 cm TEG with a 10°C ΔT can produce around 10-30 milliwatts of electrical power. This is enough to power simple wearable sensors, LED lights, or transmit occasional RFID signals.
With a larger 5 cm x 5 cm TEG and optimizing all the above factors, over 1 Watt of usable electricity can be produced from body heat. This is sufficient to trickle charge a phone or run small fans and GPS units.
Advanced TEGs integrated into clothing and gear could potentially generate up to 5-10 Watts of continuous power. Further improvements in materials and device engineering will make harvesting body heat an increasingly viable energy source.
Challenges and Limitations
Despite the potential, some challenges exist:
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TEGs only work if part of the device is in contact with skin and can absorb heat. They don't work well if insulated by clothing.
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Effectiveness drops in cold environments when less body heat is emitted. Supplemental heating may be needed.
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Thermal resistance through clothing and poor contact with the skin reduces temperature gradients. This lowers voltage and power.
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Weight and flexibility need improvement so TEGs can seamlessly integrate with wearables and not impede movement.
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Power output is still quite low compared to batteries. So TEGs are more for trickle charging and assisting batteries rather than replacing them.
Conclusion
Harnessing human body heat using thermoelectric generators offers an ingenious way of continuously generating clean energy to power small personal electronics. As TEG devices become more efficient, flexible and integrated into smart clothing, they could provide a convenient passive energy source for self-powered consumer gadgets. With further development, human body heat energy harvesting has the potential to be a personal power source we can take anywhere we go.