Human Might Turn Into Cyborg Sooner Than You Think
Aadhya Khatri
The idea of harvesting human’s biomechanical energy to power electronic devices may change our entire perception of the relation between us and technology.
- Cyborg Soldiers Will Be Ready For Battles In 2050
- This Scientist Is Turning Himself Into A Cyborg, Is It The Next Step For Humans?
- These Cyborg Plants Can Respond To Your Command
Wenzhuo Wu and his team at Purdue University are working on a way to harvest and convert biomechanical energy to a sustainable voltage that can be used for both commercial and military purposes.
Wu said that this technology can make use of currently wasted energy to power electronic devices, such as body sensors, tools to monitor users’ health, as well as devices serving for the armed force.
This innovation has already attracted a lot of attention as the team is receiving patent partner offers and it is now on the lookout for financial aid. According to IDTechEX, by 2028, the market for TENG (Triboelectric energy harvesting transducers) may be worth $480 million.
This equipment consists of liquid metal in silicone wedged between two Ecoflex layers. It can turn the mechanical energy of a living body into a self-sustaining electrical voltage. The team has conducted a test run with the LMI-TENG powering a personal interface.
The idea of harvesting human’s biomechanical energy to power electronic devices may change our entire perception of the relation between us and technology, which is a vision that is supposed to be in a sci-fi movie only.
More interestingly, this is exactly where Wu and his team found the inspiration for this special invention. A cyborg-like existence could mean the end of human species as we know today, but it might be a necessary step to save our Earth.
In the worst case scenario, some people might envision a future when the poorer are used as biomechanical energy generators for the rich, or the world is divided into smaller parts with their own self-sustaining government.
No matter what the future turns out to be, we must think of it now as Wu and his team are moving fast with their technology. Not to mention other scientists around the world.
To see for yourself the technology of Wu’s team, watch this video:
Featured Stories
Features - Jan 29, 2026
Permanently Deleting Your Instagram Account: A Complete Step-by-Step Tutorial
Features - Jul 01, 2025
What Are The Fastest Passenger Vehicles Ever Created?
Features - Jun 25, 2025
Japan Hydrogen Breakthrough: Scientists Crack the Clean Energy Code with...
ICT News - Jun 25, 2025
AI Intimidation Tactics: CEOs Turn Flawed Technology Into Employee Fear Machine
Review - Jun 25, 2025
Windows 11 Problems: Is Microsoft's "Best" OS Actually Getting Worse?
Features - Jun 22, 2025
Telegram Founder Pavel Durov Plans to Split $14 Billion Fortune Among 106 Children
ICT News - Jun 22, 2025
Neuralink Telepathy Chip Enables Quadriplegic Rob Greiner to Control Games with...
Features - Jun 21, 2025
This Over $100 Bottle Has Nothing But Fresh Air Inside
Features - Jun 18, 2025
Best Mobile VPN Apps for Gaming 2025: Complete Guide
Features - Jun 18, 2025
A Math Formula Tells Us How Long Everything Will Live
Read More
ICT News- Feb 18, 2026
Google's Project Toscana: Elevating Pixel Face Unlock to Rival Apple's Face ID
As the smartphone landscape evolves, Google's push toward superior face unlock technology underscores its ambition to close the gap with Apple in user security and convenience.
ICT News- Feb 19, 2026
Escalating Costs for NVIDIA RTX 50 Series GPUs: RTX 5090 Tops $5,000, RTX 5060 Ti Closes in on RTX 5070 Pricing
As the RTX 50 series continues to push boundaries in gaming and AI, these price trends raise questions about accessibility for average gamers.
ICT News- Feb 20, 2026
Tech Leaders Question AI Agents' Value: Human Labor Remains More Affordable
In a recent episode of the All-In podcast, prominent tech investors and entrepreneurs expressed skepticism about the immediate practicality of deploying AI agents in business operations.