LAS VEGAS: Modern humans, collectively, are burning through a heck of a lot of calories every day by pounding away on our computer keyboards. Researchers have found a way to convert that mechanical energy into actual power through a new smart keyboard.
The keyboard was developed by a team of researchers from the Georgia Institute of Technology, the Chinese Academy of Sciences and the University of California at Riverside. The journal ACS Nano recently published an article on it.
The energy conversion is “enabled by contact electrification between human fingers and keys, which converts mechanical stimuli applied to the keyboard into local electronic signals without applying an external power.” It goes on to say that this energy conversion could be used to “effectively harness typing motions for electricity to charge commercial electronics at arbitrary typing speeds greater than 100 characters per minute.
Yet, energy conversion is only one feature of many for this keyboard. It also can identify you from the way you type and will trigger an alarm through a wireless security system when someone other than you types on your machine. If that wasn’t enough, it also records keystrokes, so if someone who’s not authorized to use your computer types on it, you can replay what he typed, the paper’s abstract says.