Piezoelecric Energy Generation Through Footsteps
Rohit Kamble, Ratnesh Bhingare, Siddharth Jagtap, Aniket Kendre
Department of Information Technology, Sou. Venutai Chavan Polytechnic, Pune – 411041, India
Abstract
The continuous depletion of conventional fossil fuel reserves and the growing global demand for electricity have intensified the need for alternative, sustainable energy generation technologies. This paper presents the complete design, hardware implementation, and performance evaluation of a piezoelectric energy harvesting system that converts the mechanical pressure of human footsteps into usable electrical energy. Lead zirconate titanate (PZT) ceramic disc transducers, embedded beneath a rigid walking-surface tile, generate alternating current (AC) voltage pulses in response to pedestrian loading. These pulses are processed through a full-wave bridge rectifier circuit, filtered by an electrolytic capacitor, stored in a rechargeable lithium-ion cell, and regulated to a stable 5 V DC output via a 7805 linear voltage regulator. An Arduino Uno microcontroller provides real-time voltage monitoring through serial communication. Experimental results demonstrate open-circuit voltages of 1.8 V to 9.4 V per footstep, depending on subject body mass and walking speed, with the regulated output successfully driving LED indicator loads. Cumulative energy analysis confirms that large-scale tile arrays deployed in high-footfall public environments—such as railway stations, airports, and shopping malls—can generate meaningful supplementary power for low-consumption distributed applications. The proposed system is inherently eco-friendly, automatic in operation, and directly compatible with smart city energy management infrastructure. This work validates the practical viability of footstep-based piezoelectric energy harvesting and establishes a replicable hardware reference for further optimization.
Keywords—piezoelectric effect; footstep energy harvesting; PZT ceramic; bridge rectifier; renewable energy; smart city infrastructure