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Blog Japan’s Sidewalks Converts Human Footsteps into Useable Electricity
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  • Author Author: Catwell
  • Date Created: 3 Mar 2026 9:03 PM Date Created
  • Views 3149 views
  • Likes 7 likes
  • Comments 6 comments
  • research
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  • japan
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Japan’s Sidewalks Converts Human Footsteps into Useable Electricity

Catwell
Catwell
3 Mar 2026

image

(Image Credit: Wikimedia Commons)

Wind and sunlight are the most common sources of renewable energy, powering turbines and solar panels worldwide. Japan and other countries are now tapping a subtler source: footsteps on piezoelectric sidewalks to generate electricity.

Power-generating sidewalks have special materials working with piezoelectric technology within the tiles to produce a small electric charge when someone steps on them. Each tile has piezoelectric ceramics or polymers between the electrodes, and these are protected by durable top layers for heavy foot traffic.

Researchers often choose Lead Zirconate Titanate (PZT) as it has a high energy constant and energy conversion efficiency in the compression cycle under a typical footstep force of 0.5-5 MPa. This ceramic compound generates strong voltages from small deformations.

Other compositions include Barium Titanate, which has decent dielectric properties. It also features flexible polymers, such as polyvinylidene fluoride, for enhanced bendability, and thin films of potassium sodium niobate or zinc oxide for lightweight tiles. These compositions are stacked in patches, such as PZT-PZNM at 47 mm × 32 mm × 0.2 mm, on steel substrates.

Tiles work like a layered sandwich. They feature a top plate (steel or rubberized) for walking, a mechanical system with springs or levers to boost motion, a piezoelectric stack, and a fixed base plate. Stepping on it causes the top portion to flex downward by microns or millimeters, which applies force onto the piezoelectric elements for maximum power output. Afterward, onboard electronics transform those AC pulses into usable DC. Overall, efficiency ranges between 5-15%.

However, these sidewalks produce very little power per step---only tenths of a watt. Installing them in high-foot traffic areas, like train stations and busy crossings, makes more sense as they produce more power. For example, hundreds of people walk through Tokyo’s Shibuya Station, and that can produce enough power for information boards or LEDs in that area.

Despite the appeal, energy-generating sidewalks have some physics and practical limitations. They can only flex so much before feeling unnatural and require consistent, large crowds to produce sufficient power. So, it’s important to place them in regions with dense pedestrian flows, harvesting wasted energy from human movement.

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Top Comments

  • beacon_dave
    beacon_dave 6 days ago in reply to kmikemoo +1
    It looks like MIT managed tens of milliwatts at a walking pace with their pneumatic microturbine approach. Shoe and Combat Boot Energy Harvesting https://micronanosystems.mit.edu/shoe-and-combat-boot…
  • chloro
    chloro 9 days ago

    So basically every time I miss my train and run across the station, I’m secretly powering Japan’s electricity grid? Smile
    Imagine a display board saying: “This station is currently powered by 3 late commuters, 2 tourists, and one guy chasing the last train.”
    Pretty cool idea though, turning everyday footsteps into energy!

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