Thermal Harvesting Potential of the Human Body


Date

2018-06

Publication Type

Journal Article

ETH Bibliography

yes

Citations

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Data

Abstract

Thermoelectric energy harvesting of human body heat might supplement or even replace conventional energy storage in wearable devices for healthcare and the Internet of Humans. Although a number of thermal harvesters are presented in the literature, no conclusive data can be found on the amount of available thermal energy provided by different individuals and activities. We here present the results of an observational study with 56 test subjects of different ages (children, adults and elderly) and gender, performing predefined activities (sitting, walking) in varying environments (indoor, outdoor). Our study showed a statistical difference of thermal potential and skin properties between age groups, but not between genders. On average, stationary elderly test subjects produced ∼ 32% less heat flux compared to minors (mean: children = 13.9 mW/cm², adults = 11.4 mW/cm², elderly = 9.4 mW/cm²). This potentially correlates with an increase in thermal skin resistance with age (children = 494 cm² K/W, adults = 549 cm² K/W, elderly = 835 cm² K/W). The mean harvested power varied from 12.2 μW/cm² (elderly) to 26.2 μW/cm² (children) for stationary, and from 20.2 μW/cm² (elderly) to 69.5 μW/cm² (children) for active subjects inside of a building. The findings of this study can be used to better anticipate the available energy for different usage scenarios of thermal harvesters and optimize wearable systems accordingly.

Publication status

published

Editor

Book title

Volume

47 (6)

Pages / Article No.

3307 - 3313

Publisher

Springer

Event

Edition / version

Methods

Software

Geographic location

Date collected

Date created

Subject

Thermoelectric; energy harvesting; wearables; IoT; IoH; body heat

Organisational unit

03609 - Hierold, Christofer / Hierold, Christofer check_circle

Notes

It was possible to publish this article open access thanks to a Swiss National Licence with the publisher.

Funding

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