Ankle movement capture and conversion into energy

US11489463B2 · US · B2

Patent metadata
FieldValue
Publication numberUS-11489463-B2
Application numberUS-201916550329-A
CountryUS
Kind codeB2
Filing dateAug 26, 2019
Priority dateAug 30, 2018
Publication dateNov 1, 2022
Grant dateNov 1, 2022

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  1. Title

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  2. Abstract

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  3. Assignees and inventors

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  4. Key dates

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  5. First independent claim

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  6. CPC / IPC classifications

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  7. Citations and related patents

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Abstract

Official abstract text for this publication.

A portion of ankle movement can be harnessed into stored energy that can be released for various purposes, such as to assist in movement or to charge a battery. This harnessing can be achieved in various manners. In one example manner, an offset pulley component can transfer ankle movement to a generator in a shoe insole. In another example manner, a slider can cause a brace arch to match an ankle arch such that the movement is appropriately harnessed.

First claim

Opening claim text (preview).

What is claimed is: 1. A footwear system, comprising: a capture hardware component configured to capture a movement of an ankle joint; a conversion hardware component configured to convert the movement into an energy; and a slider connection component configured to move along the joint-to-joint axis so a movement arch of the brace matches a movement arch of the ankle joint, where the capture hardware component is located upon the ankle joint, where the conversion hardware component is located away from the ankle joint, and where the conversion hardware component is, at least in part, located as part of a heel of the footwear item. 2. The footwear system of claim 1 , where the capture hardware component and the conversion hardware component are offset on a heel-to-ankle plane. 3. The footwear system of claim 1 , where the capture hardware component is located outside a footwear outer wearer protection layer. 4. The footwear system of claim 1 , where the energy is returned to a wearer of the footwear system to aid in motion. 5. The footwear system of claim 1 , where the energy rotates a drivetrain, where the drivetrain turns a generator, and where the generator produces a charge to supply a battery. 6. The footwear system of claim 1 , where the capture hardware component is configured to capture the movement of the ankle joint, through a capture hardware component rotation, that mirrors a rotation of the ankle joint and where a center of capture hardware component rotation is about equal to the rotation of the ankle joint. 7. The footwear system of claim 6 , where the movement of the ankle joint captured by the capture hardware component is from a degree of angular rotation smaller than a degree of angular rotation of the ankle joint. 8. The footwear system of claim 1 , where the capture hardware component comprises a brace. 9. The footwear system of claim 1 , where the conversion hardware component comprises a device housing. 10. The footwear system of claim 1 , where the slider is rigid in a tangential direction to the joint-to-joint axis. 11. The footwear system of claim 1 , comprising: a generator with a drivetrain; and a battery operatively coupled to the generator, where the energy rotates a drivetrain to cause the generator to produce a charge supplied to the battery. 12. A brace associated with a footwear, comprising: a capture hardware component configured to capture a rotational movement of an ankle joint derived from forward/backward motion of a wearer of the footwear; a transfer hardware component configured to transfer the rotational movement to a non-ankle part of the footwear; a drivetrain hardware component configured to receive the transfer of the rotational movement and configured to use the transferred rotational movement to power a generator; and a slider hardware component configured to move in a head-to-toe direction during the rotational movement such that a rotation arch of the brace matches a rotation arch of the ankle during the rotational movement, where the capture hardware component is located upon the ankle joint and where the generator is located within a heel of the footwear. 13. The brace of claim 12 , where the capture hardware component is located outside a footwear outer wearer protection layer. 14. The brace of claim 12 , comprising: the generator configured to generate an electricity from the power supplied by the drivetrain, where a battery is operatively coupled to the generator and where the electricity charges the battery. 15. The brace of claim 14 , comprising: the battery, where the battery is removable. 16. The brace of claim 12 , where the capture hardware component and the drivetrain are offset in accordance with head-toe axis of the wearer. 17. The brace of claim 12 , where the capture hardware component is configured to capture the movement of the ankle joint, through a capture hardware component rotation, that mirrors a rotation of the ankle joint and where a center of capture hardware component rotation is about equal to the rotation of the ankle joint. 18. The brace of claim 17 , where the movement of the ankle joint captured by the capture hardware component is from a degree of angular rotation smaller than a degree of angular rotation of the ankle joint. 19. A footwear support, comprising: a drivetrain configured to perform a rotation in response to transferred rotational movement from an ankle of a wearer of the footwear support; and a generator configured to generate an electricity in response to the rotation, where the drivetrain receives the transferred rotational movement by way of a rigid linkage affixed to a hardware joint that functions in conjunction with an ankle joint of a wearer of the footwear support and where the rigid linkage employs a slider to have an arch of the hardware joint match an arch of the ankle. 20. The footwear support of claim 19 , comprising: a coupling hardware component configured to operatively couple the generator to a battery of a personal electronic device of the wearer, where the electricity charges the battery by way of the coupling hardware component.

Assignees

Inventors

Classifications

  • characterised by the exchange of charge or discharge related data · CPC title

  • with gears · CPC title

  • directly on road (portable devices, e.g. chocks B60T3/00) · CPC title

  • with power sources · CPC title

  • provided with a pocket, e.g. for keys or a card · CPC title

Patent family

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External sources

Frequently asked questions

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What does patent US11489463B2 cover?
A portion of ankle movement can be harnessed into stored energy that can be released for various purposes, such as to assist in movement or to charge a battery. This harnessing can be achieved in various manners. In one example manner, an offset pulley component can transfer ankle movement to a generator in a shoe insole. In another example manner, a slider can cause a brace arch to match an an…
Who is the assignee on this patent?
Us Gov Sec Army
What technology area does this patent fall under?
Primary CPC classification B60T1/04. Mapped technology areas include Operations & Transport.
When was this patent published?
Publication date Tue Nov 01 2022 00:00:00 GMT+0000 (Coordinated Universal Time) (B2). Legal status and post-grant events are not shown on this page.
What related patents are in patentsdb?
We list 8 related publications on this page (citations in our corpus or others sharing the same primary CPC).