By Arushi Aggarwal
INTRODUCTION:-
INTRODUCTION:-
The
concept is to generate renewable energy by our vehicles.
Electricity
Generating Road Ribs is a conceptual design that makes vehicles generate
renewable energy on the highways.
So we
use this idea of producing electricity by vehicles
Now
you are thinking that why we choose this
only, why not other and how can we convert all this into electricity?
Road
network of India is the largest road networks (3.314 million kilometres) in the
world and India's estimated population to be 1,129,866,154 and there are an
estimated 90 million vehicles in India, of which 5 millions are commercial
vehicles.
So
why not we use this useless heat which produces at every instant of time and we
all are wasting it.
And
now our population is increasing day by day and vehicle facilities too so this
is the reason we think of it
Till
now most widely used form of renewable energy is hydroelectricity. Once a
hydroelectric complex is constructed, the project produces no direct waste, and
has a considerably lower output level of the greenhouse gas carbon dioxide
(CO2) than fossil fuel powered energy plants.
But
this only fulfils 20% need of total electricity and there are many
disadvantages too.
Ecosystem
damage and loss of land. Large reservoirs required for the operation of
hydroelectric power stations result in submersion of extensive areas upstream
of the dams, destroying biologically rich and productive lowland
Siltation::When
water flows it has the ability to transport particles heavier than itself
downstream. This has a negative effect on dams and subsequently their power
stations, particularly those on rivers or within catchment areas with high
siltation. Siltation can fill a reservoir and reduce its capacity to control
floods along with causing additional horizontal pressure on the upstream
portion of the dam....
Flow
shortage::Changes in the amount of river flow will correlate with the amount of
energy produced by a dam. Lower River flows because of drought, climate change
or upstream dams and diversions will reduce the amount of live storage in a
reservoir therefore reducing the amount of water that can be used for Hydroelectricity.
The result of diminished river flow can be power shortages in areas that depend
heavily on hydroelectric power.
Methane
emissions (from reservoirs)
Dam
failure.
We
also have many other resources but as we discussed earlier that the population
is rapidly increasing and the rate of generation of electricity is not
accordingly increasing, so we use this concept of producing electricity
From
where we get the idea?
Metatech
Corporation develops solutions for electromagnetic environmental problems. It
offers test equipment, wave generators and couplers, testers and oscillators
and the second one is piezoelectric sensors that uses to measure the
electricity resulting from pressure, acceleration, strain or force by
converting them to an electric signal.
The
sensors are either directly mounted into additional holes into the cylinder
head or the spark/glow plug is equipped with a built in miniature piezoelectric sensor
What’s happening
right now?
Among the various means of transportation, highways cover
the widest and in effect the greatest area of our precious landmass. In context
of the present scenario, spaces required for energy generation are becoming
scarce day by day, and yet paradoxically no substantial effort has been made to
make use of the very spaces incorporated by the highways themselves. Make no
mistake - solar panels have been laid beside roads, wind turbines have been
installed in breezy areas; but the highways themselves continue to be the least
utilized ones.
Solar Roadways
The Solar Roadway is
a prototype of an 'intelligent' road with solar panels imbued onto the road
itself. Along with generating clean electricity, these panels can also provide
data about damages and other information, by the help of microprocessing boards
embedded in them. The processor's Radio Frequency Identification tags could be
used to track vehicles as well.
The indirect economic advantage of this setup is the
revenue generated by the road in form of electricity. Henceforth the costs
incurred by thermal power plants would be significantly reduced, and such
roadways can be maintained by the new found financial relief.
Solar Arch on Highways
The Solar Arch is a concept formulated by industrial
designer Tyson Steele. It will provide covering for rural roads that in turn
can generate renewable solar energy for off-grid highway lighting. The Solar
Arch can also supplement electricity demands in neighboring low capacity required
areas. Other advantages of this visionary concept include - protection of the
road from hails and icing during winter, and the sustenance of cooling effect
during summer.
Jet
Stream Super-Highway
This unique concept features vehicles
extracting energy from the road infrastructure and roads in turn drawing energy
from the environment. Based on an open-return wind tunnel design that produces
a continuous stream of air flow from the environment, the roadway is shaped
like a half-pipe in cross section. It has a series of solar-powered turbines
and fans hovering above to push air into the road pathway, in addition to
continuously drawing air at a controlled rate by outer drawing vents on the
flanks - forming a cycle effect. The solar panels lined on the upper surface of
the road make it a completely efficient green energy design. Moreover sensors
communicate with vehicles on the road for necessary fine tuned wind
adjustments.
E Turbine on the Highways
Conceptualized by industrial designer Pedro
Gomes and aptly named the E Turbine, it is
basically a wind generation system that uses the air movement emanated from
passing traffic to produce and accumulate energy. Supposedly it can also work
with street and road lighting, information panels and emergency phones. Placed
between lanes, the system generates energy from air movement, which is then
transferred to a main battery for storage as well as source.
Green
Roadway Project - Solar and wind generators mounted on Highways
It is based upon the green dictum of endless
highways becoming metamorphosed into renewable energy generators, which could
one day power our cities with clean energy and can also offer electricity for
roadside charging of electric vehicles. The Green Roadway Project makes use of
strings of solar panels, wind turbines and geothermal devices, in order to
convert such natural resources into electricity.
Concept Road
Ribs that can make your vehicle generate renewable energy
Electricity Generating Road Ribs is a
conceptual design that makes vehicles generate renewable energy on the
highways. Researchers believe that even the most efficient cars can’t convert
the entire energy in fuels to usable energy and a major percentage of the
available energy is wasted. These Road Ribs help convert some of this waste
into a usable form, which can later be utilized to power highways lights or
charge electric cars.
1. Solar Road
Bike Path
Electricity
generating road ribs:
A moving vehicle makes the rib move as well,
which helps generate renewable energy. Generated electricity is stored in a
battery installed near the roadside. Once charged, the battery can be used to
power any electrical device or may also be used at electric car charging
stations. The ribs have been designed to withstand heavy trucks and cars
without showing any signs of wear and tear.
Recent
articles have shown that scientists can now transfer electricity wirelessly.
So, all we'd need to do is pop a wireless electricity receiver into a car. Car
generates electricity by moving along the road. Car moves along the road by
generated electricity. Granted, all roads would need to be replaced to do this.
But if we could start over, and the technology was available. Seems this would
be ideal for both saving gas, and a greener planet
Turning Road Traffic into Electricity
It is indeed a good point that the estimates on
how many houses this could power is overly generous, to say the least. One thing
we don't know, though, is if the 'Dragon Power Station' is only a
prototype/proof of concept or if it is close to the best that can be done. This
makes a difference. Prototypes are often sub-optimal compromises because you
usually need to show that your idea is working before you can get financing and
credibility to allow you to do what you really want to do. Another question
without answer at the moment is whether the 'plates' used by this system are
softer than asphalt or not. They probably are to extract the maximum amount of
energy, but maybe not. If they aren't much softer than asphalt, the system
wouldn't extract much more energy from the trucks than the road would on its
own (via friction and deformation). It might be the equivalent of hitting one
or two potholes (except that potholes don't produce electricity). Still, it's
definitely not a free lunch.
But lets assume that the plates are quite a bit
softer than asphalt, or that they depress into the road slightly and the truck
has to expand energy to climb back up. Maybe the next step is to build a power
station at a place where you want to
'steal' energy from traffic. A downhill lane with a stop sign at the bottom
where vehicles need to slow down, for example. They'd be hitting the brakes and
dissipating the energy as heat anyway, so you might as well turn part of that
energy into electricity.
A group of Israeli engineers have created a
system that allows certain types of roads to generate electricity just by
driving over them. The Israeli engineers behind the project claim that a 1km
stretch of the power-generating asphalt will generate 400kW - enough power to
run eight small cars.
The system works by embedding tiny piezoelectric crystals into the road. When cars drive over the crystals, they are 'squeezed' and thus generate a small electrical charge. The new 'electric road' will be tested next month when engineers in Israel drive over a stretch of tarmac embedded with the tiny piezoelectric crystals.
According to the Environmental Transport Association (ETA), if the system was installed on every stretch of British motorway it would generate enough energy to run 34,500 small cars. The director at the ETA, Andrew Davis, predicts that with the mass roll-out of electric vehicles in the near future, "it may be that roads themselves will provide some of the new fuel - certain vehicles could be powered entirely by the roads on which they drive."
The system differs to another electricity-generating road we reported earlier, developed by a Californian local. That system uses the kinetic energy of a truck barrelling down a highway to compress tanks of hydraulic fluid located in plates on the road surface. This creates a pumping action that can turn a generator and produce electricity.
While the Israeli project is still undergoing testing, the hydraulic plate system is expected to be used by Oakland terminal operator SSA to supply around 5% of its energy needs.
The system works by embedding tiny piezoelectric crystals into the road. When cars drive over the crystals, they are 'squeezed' and thus generate a small electrical charge. The new 'electric road' will be tested next month when engineers in Israel drive over a stretch of tarmac embedded with the tiny piezoelectric crystals.
According to the Environmental Transport Association (ETA), if the system was installed on every stretch of British motorway it would generate enough energy to run 34,500 small cars. The director at the ETA, Andrew Davis, predicts that with the mass roll-out of electric vehicles in the near future, "it may be that roads themselves will provide some of the new fuel - certain vehicles could be powered entirely by the roads on which they drive."
The system differs to another electricity-generating road we reported earlier, developed by a Californian local. That system uses the kinetic energy of a truck barrelling down a highway to compress tanks of hydraulic fluid located in plates on the road surface. This creates a pumping action that can turn a generator and produce electricity.
While the Israeli project is still undergoing testing, the hydraulic plate system is expected to be used by Oakland terminal operator SSA to supply around 5% of its energy needs.
Four Methods Of
Generating Electricity For Powering Highways
Do you
recognize the image of yourself jumping on your toes on the beach, in a hurry
to reach the shore and get to the cool water. Well, the same happens to the
asphalt our cars roll on. Why not use that heat to power things on highways and
thus save tons of carbon dioxide a year?
The first and
the most obvious would be to put solar panels on the barriers that divide the
highway, to create electricity for lighting and road signs.
The second would
be to embed water pipes into the asphalt, and collect the energy in the form of
heat, which can further drive steam turbines and produce usable power. “One
property of asphalt is that it retains heat really well,” he said, “so even
after the sun goes down the asphalt and the water in the pipes stays warm. My
tests showed that during some circumstances, the water even gets hotter than
the asphalt,” says graduate student Andrew Correia, who also built a prototype
of such a system.
The third idea
proposes inserting thermoelectric materials into the asphalt. Thermoelectrics
harvest the heat difference between their two ends, so embedding them into the
ground with the ends at different depths would generate electricity. Highways
could be defrosted with the obtained energy and would ease the work of those
special utility trucks that clean the asphalt in winter.
The forth one is - consists of embedding solar
panels into the asphalt.
The Advantages :
1. Energy generating highways can produce the additional
energy output required for residences and even industries.
2. This form of energy generation is totally based upon
renewable energy source, which in effect reduces the effects of pollution
significantly.
3. Notably lessens our dependence on conventional sources
like coal, nuclear etc.
4. Expected to be a much cheaper source of energy
generation in the future, after the initial setup.
The Impact :
We should talk about the radically green impact such innovative
projects and conceptions would inevitably have. Environmentally friendly in
every way - right from reducing the effects of greenhouse gases, down to
resource conservation, this i s the righteous way to progress into the future
It was too heavy file to post picture .....so i m not able to post pic of this file will try further if this can happen .........
ReplyDeleteNice work keep it up.
Pawan Dhankhar
Truly Appreciable...
ReplyDelete