Project Report Group12
Project Report Group12
MOTION
A PROJECT REPORT
submitted by
AKSHAY K CEM17ME012
AMALKRISHNA U S CEM17ME016
VINAYAK S R CEM17ME046
to
of
Bachelor of Technology
in
Mechanical Engineering
Signature
CERTIFICATE
This is to certify that the report entitled Power Generation Through
Human Motion submitted by Akshay K (CEM17ME012), Amalkr-
ishna U S (CEM17ME016), Muhammed Roshan N (CEM17ME032),
Vinayak S R (CEM17ME046) to the APJ Abdul Kalam Technological Uni-
versity in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the award of the Degree
of Bachelor of Technology in Mechanical Engineering is a bonafide record of the
project work carried out by him/her under my/our guidance and supervision.This
report in any form has not been submitted to any other University or Institute
for any purpose.
iv
Contents
List of Tables ix
Abbreviations x
1 INTRODUCTION 1
2 LITERATURE REVIEW 2
2.0.1 Power Generation in Automobile Suspension System” by C.
Nithiyesh Kumar, K.Gowtham, M.Mani- kandan, P.Bharathkanna,
T. Manoj Kumar . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2
2.0.2 “Generation of Electrical Energy from Foot Step Using Rack
and Pinion Mechanism” by Md.Azhar, Zitender Raj puro-
hit, Abdul Saif, Nalla Abhinay, P.Sai Chandu . . . . . . . 2
v
4 FOOT STEP ARRANGEMENT 12
4.1 BLOCK DIAGRAM . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
5 WORKING PRINCIPLE 13
6 DESIGN 15
6.1 DESIGN CONSIDERATION . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
6.2 DESIGN PROCEDURE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
6.3 FACTORS TO BE CONSIDERED . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
6.4 AESTHETIC CONSIDERATIONS IN DESIGN . . . . . . . . . 18
6.5 ASPECTS OF AESTHETIC DESIGN . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
6.6 ERGONOMICS CONSIDERATIONS IN DESIGN . . . . . . . . . 19
6.7 MANUFACTURING CONSIDERATIONS IN DESIGN . . . . . . 19
6.8 STANDARDIZATION . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
6.8.1 Objectives of standardization . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
6.9 MECHANICAL PROPERTIES OF MATERIALS . . . . . . . . . 20
7 PART SPECIFICATION 22
7.1 SPECIFICATION OF PINION . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22
7.2 SPECIFICATION OF RACK . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
7.3 SPECIFICATION OF PLATES . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
7.4 SHAFT DIMENSION . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24
7.5 SUPPORTING PADDLE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24
7.6 DIMENSION OF ROD SUPPORTING FOR TOP PLATE . . . . 25
7.7 SPECIFICATION OF SPRING . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25
vi
8.5 BORING OPERATION . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32
8.6 KNURLING . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32
8.7 Thread cutting . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33
10 CONCLUSION 38
10.1 PRESENT CONFLICT . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 38
10.2 FUTURE SCOPE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39
vii
List of Figures
viii
List of Tables
ix
ABBREVIATIONS
ME : Mechanical Engineering
x
CHAPTER 1
INTRODUCTION
This project was motivated by the need for a device that would generate elec-
tricity from human motion, especially footsteps. Electricity is a very important
resource in people daily life. There are numerous sources from which are able to
generate electrical energy. The major sources of energy include but are not limited
to coal, natural gas, petroleum, and nuclear energy. Most of these sources have
adverse effects on the environmental inclusion such as air pollution; for example,
from coal energy generation plants which then cumulatively leads to effects such
as increase in rates of global warming.
This project seeks to establish an environmentally friendly way of generating
electric power from human motion. Such a system could be highly effective for
installation in places that expect frequent mobility of a large population such
as in educational institutions like universities and subway station entrances and
platforms.
1
CHAPTER 2
LITERATURE REVIEW
2
in this source of energy. It is very useful to the places like all roads and as well
as all kind of foot step which is used to generate the non-conventional energy like
electricity.
3.1 INTRODUCTION
Fuel deposit in the world will soon deplete by the end of 2025, Fuel scarcity
will be maximum. Country like India may not have the chance to use petroleum
products. Keeping this dangerous situation in mind we tried to make use of non-
pollutant natural resource of petrol energy.
The creation of new source of perennial, environmentally acceptable, low cost
electrical energy as a replacement for energy from rapidly depleting resources of
fossil fuels is the fundamental need for the survival of mankind. We have only
about 25 years of oil reserves and 75 – 100 years of coal reserves. Resort to mea-
sure beginning of coal in thermal electric stations to serve the population would
result in global elemental change in leading to worldwide drought and desertifi-
cation.
The use of nuclear electric-stations are limited to certain sectors.The solar,wind,rain,water
based power generations solely depend on the source factors which are not avail-
able everywhere and every time constantly.It is not possible to consider such sys-
tems for meeting continuous uninterrupted concentrated base load electric power
requirements.Energy plays an important role in the material, social and cultural
life of man kind. The energy needs are increasing day by day. This is the re-
sult of population growth and increase in the standard of living which is directly
proportional to energy consumption.
4
For a number of these non-conventional energy sources, the weather, atmo-
spheric conditions and the environment have to cooperate for harnessing their
energy. Wind might be in short supply for wind turbines, or cloud cover might
interfere with solar energy collection. Geothermal plants have been known to de-
plete their energy source, sometimes unpredictably. This inconsistency and low
reliability can be costly, especially when the goal is to convert an energy source
into electricity for power distribution.
When the supply is inconsistent and unreliable, large quantities of power might
not be generated from non-conventional energy sources. That is problematic if
a country wants to depend on the energy source to meet the demands of pow-
ering an entire nation. The inconsistency, unreliability and unpredictability of
non-conventional energy sectors that are still in their infancy lead to debate on
whether the sectors are feasibly sustainable for the long term.
Pollution is a major ecological issue when it comes to non-conventional energy
sources. Wind turbine farms create noise pollution. Nuclear reactors create toxic
wastes that are harmful to living things, thus making storage, transport and dis-
posal a serious challenge. Geothermal plants have been associated with toxic
emissions such as sulfur dioxide, silica and heavy metal deposits of mercury, ar-
senic and boron.
Harmful risks from certain non-conventional energy sources are a reality. Wind
energy farms are notorious for harming species of birds, bats and insects with
windmill blades. Certain solar energy farms create intense hot zones in the atmo-
sphere from the amount of heat bouncing off their reflective surfaces. These hot
zones have harmed, blinded and killed passing birds and insects. The construction
of facilities to take advantage of ocean energy can destabilize marine ecosystems,
adversely affecting both nesting grounds and hunting grounds, threatening the
future of entire species.
Starting a farm or plant that leverages solar, wind, algae, geothermal, nuclear,
hydro-power and ocean avenues requires hefty funding and investments. Acquir-
ing the real estate to place the windmills, solar panels, algae farm, geothermal
facility, nuclear plant, hydro-power dam and ocean center requires sizable up-
front capital outlays to fund, build, maintain and implement the endeavors prop-
erly with infrastructure and technologies that are up to code standards. The
3.3 Objectives
To design and develop the model of power generation. Also fabricate the
model which will work on the systems for required application. In this project we
are converting Mechanical energy into Electrical energy. We are trying to utilize
the wasted energy in a useful way. By using Rack and Pinion arrangement we are
converting to and fro motion of the steps into rotational motion of the dynamo.
A cutting tool or cutter is any tool that is used to remove some material from
the work piece by means of shear deformation. Cutting may be accomplished by
single-point or multi-point tools. Single-point tools are used in turning, shaping,
planing and similar operations, and remove material by means of one cutting
edge. Milling and drilling tools are often multi-point tools. It is a body having
teeth or cutting edges on it. Grinding tools are also multi-point tools. Each grain
of abrasive functions as a microscopic single-point cutting edge (although of high
negative rake angle), and shears a tiny chip.
Cutting tool materials must be harder than the material which is to be cut, and
the tool must be able to withstand the heat and force generated in the metal-
cutting process. Also, the tool must have a specific geometry, with clearance
angles designed so that the cutting edge can contact the work-piece without the
rest of the tool dragging on the work-piece surface. The angle of the cutting face
is also important, as is the flute width, number of flutes or teeth, and margin size.
In order to have a long working life, all of the above must be optimized, plus the
speeds and feeds at which the tool is run.
Arc welding is a process that is used to join metal to metal by using electricity
to create enough heat to melt metal, and the melted metals when cooled results
in binding of the metals. It is a type of welding that uses a welding power supply
to create an electric arc between an electrode and the base material to melt the
metals at the welding point. They can use either direct (DC) or alternating (AC)
current, and consumable or non-consumable electrodes. The welding region is
usually protected by some type of shielding gas, vapor, or slag. Arc welding
processes may be manual, semi-automatic, or fully automated.
Drilling is a cutting process that uses a drill bit to cut a hole of circular cross-
section in solid materials. The drill bit is usually a rotary cutting tool, often
multi-point. The bit is pressed against the work-piece and rotated at rates from
hundreds to thousands of revolutions per minute. This forces the cutting edge
against the work-piece, cutting off chips (swarf) from the hole as it is drilled.
In rock drilling, the hole is usually not made through a circular cutting motion,
though the bit is usually rotated. Instead, the hole is usually made by hammering
a drill bit into the hole with quickly repeated short movements. The hammer-
ing action can be performed from outside the hole (top-hammer drill) or within
the hole (down-the-hole drill, DTH). Drills used for horizontal drilling are called
drifter drills.
In rare cases, specially-shaped bits are used to cut holes of non-circular cross-
section; a square cross-section is possible.
12
CHAPTER 5
WORKING PRINCIPLE
The rack pinion, spring arrangement is fixed between the supporting frames
and the top frames. The spring is used to return the pushed top frame back-to
the same position by releasing the load. The pinion shaft is connected to the
supporter as shown in fig. The second gear is coupled with the pinion shaft. This
gear is coupled to another gear vertically with the help of gear arrangement.
This first gear is used to transfer the rotation force to the second gear. The
second gear is rotating in the same direction for the forward and reverse rotational
movements of the first gear.
The second gear wheel is coupled to the generator shaft . The generator used
here, is permanent magnet D.C generator. The generated voltage is approximate
12 Volt D.C. This D.C voltage is stored to the Lead-acid 12 Volt battery. The
battery is connected to the inverter. This inverter is used to convert the 12 Volt
D.C to the 230 Volt A.C. This 230 Volt A.C voltage is used to activate the light,
fan and etc.
By increasing the capacity of battery and inverter circuit, the power rating
is increased. The complete arrangement is kept inside the floor level except the
13
pushing arrangement.
DESIGN
• It should employ locally available materials and skills. Standard steel pieces
such as steel plates, iron rods, angle iron, and flat stock that are locally
available should be used. Standard tools used in machine shop such as hack
saw, files, punches, taps dies; medium duty welder; drill press; small lathe
and milling machine should be adequate to fabricate the parts needed for
the project.
15
• It should make use of used parts wherever possible.
2. Synthesis
3. Analysis of forces
4. Selection of material
7. Determination of dimensions
8. Modification of dimensions
9. Preparation of drawings
• Rigidity
• Safety
• Cost
• Weight
• Ergonomics
• Aesthetics
• Manufacturing considerations
• Assembly considerations
• Conformance to standards
• Product Life
• Vibrations
• Thermal considerations
• Lubrication
• Maintenance
• Flexibility
• Stiffness
• Corrosion
• Noise
• Environmental considerations
• Color
• Continuity
• Variety
• Proportion
• Noise
• Contrast
• Style
• Tolerance
• Working environment
• Stiffness/Rigidity
• Elasticity
• Plasticity
• Ductility
• Brittleness
• Malleability
• Toughness
• Machinability
• Resilience
• Creep
• Hardness
PART SPECIFICATION
• MODULE : 1.8
• PRESSURE ANGLE : 20
22
• NO OF TOOTH : 24
• NO OF TOOTH : 30
• LENGTH : 220mm
26
The laser beam is a column of very high intensity light, of a single wavelength,
or color. In the case of a typical CO2 laser, that wavelength is in the Infra-Red
part of the light spectrum, so it is invisible to the human eye. The beam is
only about 3/4 of an inch in diameter as it travels from the laser resonator,
which creates the beam, through the machine’s beam path. It may be bounced
in different directions by a number of mirrors, or “beam benders”, before it is
finally focused onto the plate. The focused laser beam goes through the bore of
a nozzle right before it hits the plate. Also flowing through that nozzle bore is a
compressed gas, such as Oxygen or Nitrogen.
Focusing the laser beam can be done by a special lens, or by a curved mirror, and
this takes place in the laser cutting head. The beam has to be precisely focused
so that the shape of the focus spot and the density of the energy in that spot are
perfectly round and consistent, and centered in the nozzle. By focusing the large
beam down to a single pinpoint, the heat density at that spot is extreme. Think
about using a magnifying glass to focus the sun’s rays onto a leaf, and how that
can start a fire. Now think about focusing 6 KW of energy into a single spot, and
you can imagine how hot that spot will get.
The high power density results in rapid heating, melting and partial or complete
vaporizing of the material. When cutting mild steel, the heat of the laser beam
is enough to start a typical “oxy-fuel” burning process, and the laser cutting gas
will be pure oxygen, just like an oxy-fuel torch. When cutting stainless steel or
aluminum, the laser beam simply melts the material, and high pressure nitrogen
is used to blow the molten metal out of the kerf.
On a CNC laser cutter, the laser cutting head is moved over the metal plate in
the shape of the desired part, thus cutting the part out of the plate. A capacitive
height control system maintains a very accurate distance between the end of the
nozzle and the plate that is being cut. This distance is important, because it
determines where the focal point is relative to the surface of the plate. Cut
quality can be affected by raising or lowering the focal point from just above the
surface of the plate, at the surface, or just below the surface.
There are many, many other parameters that affect cut quality as well, but when
all are controlled properly, laser cutting is a stable, reliable, and very accurate
cutting process.
• Holes can be located accurately by using an optical laser system for align-
ment.
8.2.1 Facing
Facing is the operation of machining the ends of a piece of work to produce
flat surface square with the axis. The operation involves feeding the tool perpen-
dicular to the axis of rotation of the work.
8.6 KNURLING
Knurling is the process of embossing a diamond shaped pattern on the surface
of the workpiece. The knurling tool holder has one or two hardened steel rollers
with edges of required pattern. The tool holder is pressed against the rotating
work. The rollers emboss the required pattern. The tool holder is fed automat-
ically to the required length. Knurls are available in coarse, medium and fine
pitches. The patterns may be straight, inclined or diamond shaped.
3. A definite ratio between the longitudinal feed and rotation of the headstock
spindle should be found Suitable gears with required number of teeth should
be mounted on the spindle and the leadscrew.
5. The position of the tumbler gears are adjusted according to the type of the
thread (right hand or left hand).
8. Depth of cut is set suitably to allow the tool to make a light cut on the
9. When the cut is made for the required length, the half nut lever is The
carriage is brought back to its original position and the above procedure is
repeated until the required depth of the thread is achieved.
10. After the process of thread cutting is over, the thread is checked by suitable
gauges.
Here,
Force = Weight of the body ×M ass of acceleration
F = 80kg × 9.81m/s2
F= 784.8 N
Distance traveled by the body = Height of the top part
= 12cm
= 0.12m
Output power = Work done/time
= 784.4×0.12/60
= 1.56 Watts
Watt = volt×current
35
Watt = volt x 0.25
By this we get voltage = 1.56/0.25
=2.08 volts approx.
The differences between the theoretical and actual results for different ranges
of mass of individual are presented in table and graph. It is observed that the
generated power increased proportionally with the mass of an individual. In
general, the individual with body mass around 55 kg are the teenager or adults
CONCLUSION
38
tenance cost and life of system. Maximum advantage of this system can be taken
if installed in highly dense area.
[1] E.C Chang, Y.C Liu, Int. J . Smart Grid Clean Energy 7, 2018.
40