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Yes, but given that transmitters use very little power, the battery could potentially be fully charged every time you pressurize the first stage. This means you may be able to significantly reduce battery replacement which would be a big step in making AI replace the SPG. Not only do you eliminate the hassle, but you eliminate the potential for flooding because the diver did not re-seal the case properly or damaged the o ring after the battery replacement.
---------- Post added January 12th, 2016 at 08:49 PM ----------
I'll add that you should read the Georgia Tech article I linked. It's not motion that creates the electrical charge, it's pressure. The pressure deforms the material which releases electricity and then is stored in the battery. The process can be repeated and continue to deliver a renewable energy source.
pressure causes deformation, deformation is motion. Transmitters use a whole lot more power than can be generated on a single deformation which requires cycling of the piezo button. Not practical and the transmitters require low power, but fairly high voltage for effective broadcast of the signal, this can't be generated with piezo buttons without cycling and a fairly high rate, and since that would require air, would have to be incorporated into the first stage itself to take advantage of the diaphragm cycling, but even that isn't fast enough for it to be reliable, and only works while you're breathing on it. Think about it this way, if it actually generated enough energy to power anything meaningful, they would have put them under every heavy thing in the world to create perpetual energy....
Regarding CCR's, they won't take over OC, ever. The technology is simple, gas flows through sorb, CO2 gets removed, O2 gets added to replace it. BUT, they require very particular adjustment to the individual, are horrifically expensive, require custom machine work, and even if they were $2k instead of $10k, they don't provide anything significant over open circuit for 99% of the recreational diving.
The biggest problem with AI becoming universal, because that is the title of the thread, AI replacing SPG's, is what was mentioned a few posts above this. How do you make sure the pressure in the tank you want is the one you are looking at when you carry multiple bottles? How will the computer keep a bottle in the same position on a screen when you drop it off and pick it back up? That's one of the biggest issues right now and while I would be 100% OK with button gauges on one side for a quick sanity check during tech diving, and can't wait for a good computer mfg to come out with inexpensive wireless transmitters, the ROI for the manufacturers just isn't there at this point.