Electricity from rainwater: New method shows potential for clean energy
Tiny drops of water might not seem like powerhouse energy producers,关键字1 but a new method shows how simple tubes might be able to turn falling rain into an energy source. In tests, the method was able to power up 12 LED lights. When it comes to generating clean energy from water, hydroelectric would certainly be the first thing to come to mind. But the issue with utility-level turbines is that they need large flows of water to operate, so their installation locations are limited. Wave energy is steadily coming on board as well, but again, that type of power generation is very site specific. But there's another type of water that blankets nearly all of our planet at one time or another: raindrops. And now researchers from the National University of Singapore have shown that there might be a way to generate power just by channeling the drops a certain way. “Water that falls through a vertical tube generates a substantial amount of electricity by using a specific pattern of water flow: plug flow,” says Siowling Soh, the corresponding author of the new study. “This plug flow pattern could allow rain energy to be harvested for generating clean and renewable electricity.” The pattern Soh references was established through a rainwater simulating device in the team's lab. The researchers created a tower topped with a metallic needle that allowed rain-sized drops of water to drip out. Beneath this, they placed a 32-cm-tall tube (12-in) with a diameter of 2 mm (0.07 in). The tube was made out of an electrically conductive polymer. When the drops slammed into the top of this tube, they were broken into pieces that had air in between each – a pattern known as plug flow. As the air and water traveled down the tubes, electrical charges in the water separated, and wires attached to the top of the tube and a collection cup beneath it harvested the resulting electricity. The plug-flow system was five times more effective than one tested with a steady flow of water. It was ultimately able to convert about 10% of the energy from the falling water into electricity. Further testing showed that using two tubes doubled electrical production, enough to power 12 LEDs continuously for 20 seconds. While that's no Hoover Dam, the researchers believe that their system could eventually be installed in bulk in areas like urban rooftops where they could contribute to a building's overall clean energy supply. They also say that the droplets flowing through their system worked at a much slower rate than actual rainfall, so the system should work just as well – or better – in actual outdoor conditions. The research has been published in the journal ACS Central Science. Source: American Chemical Society
- 最近发表
- 随机阅读
-
- 100平米全包装修价格 全包装修事项
- 第238章 她凶恶的侄女是认了她
- 第241章 这蠢爹不能要了啊
- 第307章 您可莫要辜负了奴家这颗心
- สงครามรัสเซีย
- 第325章 325皇太后回宫
- 第260章 苍鱼墨鸠
- 第259章 朕不是怕死,是不敢死
- From Ian to Helene to Milton: Extreme weather is anything but 'natural'
- 第302章 母亲可有觉得女儿残忍
- 第237章 破而后立
- 第252章 明德帝危矣
- 绿色行动:11类场所生活垃圾分类工作指引
- 第256章 生不同衾死同穴
- 第262章 又是时安夏
- 第291章 竟是你们自找的
- 关于南盘江流域综合规划工作调研情况汇报
- 第241章 这蠢爹不能要了啊
- 第265章 海晏郡主
- 第244章 对皇太后起了浓烈杀心
- 搜索
-
- 友情链接
-