Up til 35w of sustainable energy per tile.
Floor tiles in england turn kinetic energy into electricity.
Essentially the tile surface flexes about five millimetres when stepped on which creates kinetic energy that is then converted to produce an average of six watts per footstep.
This kinetic energy is directly converted into electricity.
It s a series of special tiles with led lights in the center of each.
With pavegen s kinetic technology footsteps can provide engaging clean energy generating experiences to power off grid bespoke applications such as lighting and environmental monitoring across a wide range of sectors.
Using distancing grids between the kinetic tiles we kan set up any floor to fit the compliance rules.
Data capture and visualisation.
The tile flex slightly when stepped on to turn human power into energy.
This can then be captured for lighting areas.
The tiles are a kind of kinetic energy recovery system.
Designed for use in in high foot traffic areas the tiles convert the kinetic energy from footsteps of pedestrians into renewable electricity which can be stored in a lithium polymer battery or.
We use the generated electricity on the spot to power the floor s infinity led lights.
Every time someone steps on the tile they generate seven watts of power.
Most of that energy is wasted just dissipating into the floor tiles.
Tile size is 75x75x20.
Through this process the floor interacts with the public and involves them in a unique and interactive energy experience.
A kinetic floor tile that also housed a bendable solar panel could be 66 as efficient as a standard solar panel but could also continue generating electricity when the sun went down.
Recent pavegen installations include smart city developments retail destinations sports stadia and education institutions in hong kong india korea thailand.
Each floor module can produce up to 35 wp of sustained output.
What we do.
Designed by the uk based technology company pavegen these floor tiles are intended to convert kinetic energy into electricity for a variety of different infrastructure uses.
My idea was a floor tile that would convert the kinetic energy from a footstep into electricity he says.
But in one hallway there s something new on the ground.
We ve seen these before in race cars and buses but where recovery systems in automobiles convert the kinetic energy normally lost in.