The presentation is very artistic, but the science is, er, pseudo, or maybe, hopeful. ... and self-contradictory.
Two energy extraction mechanism are described.
In one, the poles flex and apply stress to a piezo stack. In order for that to happen, the root of the pole must be fixed, or nearly so.
In the other, the poles wiggle around some indeterminate center in the base, where devices described as shock absorbers somehow generate not heat, but electricity, used to run a pump in each pole/base cell to provide cellular small scale pumped storage and hydro power generation.
Are the pole roots fixed, or pinned? Both, according to the writeup. Possibly both at once.
Back to the piezo stack, described as producing current. ... well, sort of. Piezo devices emit or absorb charge, depending on how they are stressed. There's only current when the stress is changing, and really not all that much current.
Wait, it gets more interesting. A piezo disk being compressed on a random edge, by bending the stack, would emit charge from that edge. ... and absorb charge on the diametrically opposite edge, and do neither at the quarter points where there's no net stress. So you can't, as postulated, just put large electrodes between the piezo discs, you'd need an array of electrodes, and more than the postulated two wires, or many diodes. Or circular arrays of piezo discs, not the single disc with a tension member through a hole in the center as postulated.
Again, the presentation is a thing of beauty. The right team of confi.., er, shyst..., er, croo.., er, managers, could turn that presentation into a career. All they need is an investor; there's one born every minute.
Mike Halloran
Pembroke Pines, FL, USA