Harvesting energy from high‐frequency impinging water droplets by a droplet‐based electricity generator

Harvesting energy from water, in the form of raindrops, river, and ocean waves, is of considerable importance and has potential applications in self‐powered electronic devices and large‐scale energy needs. Recently, the droplet‐based electricity generator has shown an increase by several orders of m...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inEcoMat (Beijing, China) Vol. 3; no. 4
Main Authors Wang, Lili, Song, Yuxin, Xu, Wanghuai, Li, Wanbo, Jin, Yuankai, Gao, Shouwei, Yang, Siyan, Wu, Chenyang, Wang, Steven, Wang, Zuankai
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Hoboken, USA John Wiley & Sons, Inc 01.08.2021
Wiley
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Summary:Harvesting energy from water, in the form of raindrops, river, and ocean waves, is of considerable importance and has potential applications in self‐powered electronic devices and large‐scale energy needs. Recently, the droplet‐based electricity generator has shown an increase by several orders of magnitude in electrical output, overcoming the drawback of traditional droplet‐based device limited by interfacial effects. Despite this exciting result, the output performance of this novel droplet‐based electricity generator is limited by relatively low frequency of impinging droplets owing to the formation of a continuous liquid film at high impact frequency, which might hinder its practical applications. To overcome this challenge, here, we report the design of a superhydrophobic surface based droplet electricity generator, referred to as SHS‐DEG, which can timely shed water droplets from the surface without the formation of liquid film at high impact frequency, and thereby generating enhanced average electrical output. Moreover, our SHS‐DEG exhibits many distinctive advantages over conventional design including robustness, long‐term durability, and power generation stability even in harsh environments. We envision that the ability to harvest electrical energy from water droplets at high impact frequency has promising applications in various energy‐harvesting systems. Here, we report the design of a superhydrophobic surface based droplet electricity generator, referred to as SHS‐DEG, which allows for timely water droplet shedding at high impact frequency without the formation of unwanted liquid film and is capable of efficient energy harvesting without compromising output performance. Our SHS‐DEG has many promising advantages including simple fabrication, robustness, long‐term durability, and power generation stability even in harsh environments.
Bibliography:Lili Wang and Yuxin Song contributed equally to this work.
Funding information
National Natural Science Foundation of China, Grant/Award Number: 51975502; Research Grants Council of Hong Kong, Grant/Award Numbers: 11213320, C1006‐20WF
ISSN:2567-3173
2567-3173
DOI:10.1002/eom2.12116