Piezoelectric materials generate a small amount of electricity when they vibrate. The challenge is to use a smaller piezoelectric material to collect pulses of electricity each time the heart beats. Daniel Inman, the Chair of the University’s Aerospace Engineering Department, says that they were able to demonstrate a hundredth-of-an-inch material generating 18 microwatts of power, which is enough to power 18 pacemakers. “We’ve proven that it’s definitely do-able,” says Amin Karami, a graduate research fellow.
The end goal will be to develop a smaller and stable, fully-functioning heart-powered pacemaker. For pacemaker users, this means that they only need a single operation, therefore reducing the risk of complicated surgeries. Another benefit of battery-less pacemakers is that they are not affected by magnetic fields, such as MRI. “I looked at that and wondered, ‘How would you power medical devices?’” Karami said. “Then I looked down at my chest and thought, ‘Well, the heart is something that vibrates.'”