Engineers harvest abundant clean energy from thin air, 24/7
Date:
May 24, 2023
Source:
University of Massachusetts Amherst
Summary:
A team of engineers has recently shown that nearly any material can
be turned into a device that continuously harvests electricity
from humidity in the air. Researchers describe the 'generic
Air-gen effect'-- nearly any material can be engineered with
nanopores to harvest, cost effective, scalable, interruption-free
electricity. The secret lies in being able to pepper the material
with nanopores less than 100 nanometers in diameter.
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FULL STORY ==========================================================================
A team of engineers at the University of Massachusetts Amherst has
recently shown that nearly any material can be turned into a device
that continuously harvests electricity from humidity in the air. The
secret lies in being able to pepper the material with nanopores less
than 100 nanometers in diameter. The research appeared in the journal
Advanced Materials.
"This is very exciting," says Xiaomeng Liu, a graduate student in
electrical and computer engineering in UMass Amherst's College of
Engineering and the paper's lead author. "We are opening up a wide door
for harvesting clean electricity from thin air." "The air contains an
enormous amount of electricity," says Jun Yao, assistant professor of electrical and computer engineering in the College of Engineering at
UMass Amherst, and the paper's senior author. "Think of a cloud, which
is nothing more than a mass of water droplets. Each of those droplets
contains a charge, and when conditions are right, the cloud can produce a lightning bolt - - but we don't know how to reliably capture electricity
from lightning. What we've done is to create a human-built, small-scale
cloud that produces electricity for us predictably and continuously
so that we can harvest it." The heart of the human-made cloud depends
on what Yao and his colleagues call the "generic Air-gen effect," and
it builds on work that Yao and co-author Derek Lovley, Distinguished
Professor of Microbiology at UMass Amherst, had previously completed in
2020 showing that electricity could be continuously harvested from the
air using a specialized material made of protein nanowires grown from
the bacterium Geobacter sulfurreducens.
"What we realized after making the Geobacter discovery," says Yao, "is
that the ability to generate electricity from the air -- what we then
called the 'Air- gen effect' -- turns out to be generic: literally any
kind of material can harvest electricity from air, as long as it has
a certain property." That property? "It needs to have holes smaller
than 100 nanometers (nm), or less than a thousandth of the width of a
human hair." This is because of a parameter known as the "mean free
path," the distance a single molecule of a substance, in this case
water in the air, travels before it bumps into another single molecule
of the same substance. When water molecules are suspended in the air,
their mean free path is about 100 nm.
Yao and his colleagues realized that they could design an electricity
harvester based around this number. This harvester would be made from
a thin layer of material filled with nanopores smaller than 100 nm that
would let water molecules pass from the upper to the lower part of the material. But because each pore is so small, the water molecules would
easily bump into the pore's edge as they pass through the thin layer. This means that the upper part of the layer would be bombarded with many more charge-carrying water molecules than the lower part, creating a charge imbalance, like that in a cloud, as the upper part increased its charge relative to the lower part. This would effectually create a battery --
one that runs as long as there is any humidity in the air.
"The idea is simple," says Yao, "but it's never been discovered before,
and it opens all kinds of possibilities." The harvester could be
designed from literally all kinds of material, offering broad choices for cost-effective and environment-adaptable fabrications. "You could image harvesters made of one kind of material for rainforest environments,
and another for more arid regions." And since humidity is ever-present,
the harvester would run 24/7, rain or shine, at night and whether or not
the wind blows, which solves one of the major problems of technologies
like wind or solar, which only work under certain conditions.
Finally, because air humidity diffuses in three-dimensional space and
the thickness of the Air-gen device is only a fraction of the width
of a human hair, many thousands of them can be stacked on top of each
other, efficiently scaling up the amount of energy without increasing
the footprint of the device.
Such an Air-gen device would be capable of delivering kilowatt-level
power for general electrical utility usage.
"Imagine a future world in which clean electricity is available anywhere
you go," says Yao. "The generic Air-gen effect means that this future
world can become a reality." This research was supported by the National Science Foundation, Sony Group, Link Foundation, and the Institute for
Applied Life Sciences (IALS) at UMass Amherst, which combines deep and interdisciplinary expertise from 29 departments on the UMass Amherst
campus to translate fundamental research into innovations that benefit
human health and well-being.
* RELATED_TOPICS
o Matter_&_Energy
# Electricity # Energy_Technology # Aerospace #
Nature_of_Water
o Earth_&_Climate
# Environmental_Science # Pollution # Environmental_Issues
# Air_Quality
* RELATED_TERMS
o Electricity_generation o Solar_cell o Humidity o
Speed_of_sound o Solar_power o Soil o Triboelectric_effect
o Surface_weather_analysis
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========================================================================== Journal Reference:
1. Xiaomeng Liu, Hongyan Gao, Lu Sun, Jun Yao. Generic Air‐Gen
Effect
in Nanoporous Materials for Sustainable Energy Harvesting from
Air Humidity. Advanced Materials, 2023; DOI: 10.1002/adma.202300748 ==========================================================================
Link to news story:
https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2023/05/230524181948.htm
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