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Slip-and-slide power generators

05.24.12 | American Institute of Physics

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Researchers from Vestfold University College in Norway have created a simple, efficient energy harvesting device that uses the motion of a single droplet to generate electrical power. The new technology could be used as a power source for low-power portable devices, and would be especially suitable for harvesting energy from low frequency sources such as human body motion, write the authors in a paper accepted to the American Institute of Physics' (AIP) journal Applied Physics Letters . The harvester produces power when an electrically conductive droplet (mercury or an ionic liquid) slides along a thin microfabricated material called an electret film, which has a permanent electric charge built into it during deposition. Cyclic tilting of the device causes the droplet to accelerate across the film's surface; the maximum output voltage (and power) occurs when the sliding droplet reaches its maximum velocity at one end of the film. A prototype of the fluidic energy harvester demonstrated a peak output power at 0.18 microwatts, using a single droplet 1.2 millimeters in diameter sliding along a 2-micrometer-thick electret film.

Title: Power Generation from Conductive Droplet Sliding on Electret Film
Journal: Applied Physics Letters
Authors: Zhaochu Yang (1), Einar Halvorsen (1), and Tao Dong (1)

(1) Department of Micro and Nano Systems Technology (IMST), Vestfold University College, Horten, Norway

Applied Physics Letters

Keywords

Article Information

Contact Information

Jennifer Lauren Lee
jlee@aip.org

How to Cite This Article

APA:
American Institute of Physics. (2012, May 24). Slip-and-slide power generators. Brightsurf News. https://www.brightsurf.com/news/8JX655WL/slip-and-slide-power-generators.html
MLA:
"Slip-and-slide power generators." Brightsurf News, May. 24 2012, https://www.brightsurf.com/news/8JX655WL/slip-and-slide-power-generators.html.