Green power from evaporating water
Researchers have created an engine that uses
nothing but water and bacteria to power small devices. As a proof of concept
they built a working miniature toy car
An immensely powerful yet in visible force pulls water from the
earth to the top of the tallest trees and delivers snow to the tops of the
Himalayas. Yet despite the power of evaporating water, its potential to propel
self-sufficient devices or produce electricity has remained largely untapped
until now. In the June issue of Nature Communications, Columbia University
scientists report the development of two novel devices that derive power
directly from evaporation a floating, piston-driven engine that generates
electricity causing a light to flash, and a rotary engine that drives a tin y
car.
When evaporation energy is scaled up, the researchers predict, it
could one day produce electricity from giant floating power generators that sit
on bays or reservoirs, or from huge rotating machines akin to wind turbines
that sit above water, said Ozgur Sahin, the paper's lead author.
“Evaporation is a fundamental force of nature,“ Sahin said. “It's
everywhere, and it's more powerful than other forces like wind and waves.“
Last year, Sahin found that when bacterial spores shrink and swell
with changing humidity, they can push and pull other objects forcefully. They
pack more energy, pound for pound, than other materials used in engineering for
moving objects, he reported in a previous paper. Building on last year's
findings, Sahin and his Columbia colleagues sought to build actual devices that
could be powered by such energy.
To build a floating, piston-driven engine, the researchers first
glued spores to both sides of a thin, double-sided plastic tape akin to that in
cassette tapes, creating a dashed line of spores. They did the same on the
opposite side of the tape, but offset the line so dashes on one side overlapped
with gaps on the other.
When dry air shrinks the spores, the spore-covered dashes curve.
This transforms the tape from straight to wavy, shortening the tape. If one or
both ends of the tape are anchored, the tape tugs on whatever it's attached
to.Conversely, when the air is moist, the tape extends, releasing the force.
The result is a new type of artificial muscle controlled by changing humidity.
Sahin and Xi Chen, a postdoctoral fellow in his lab, then placed
dozens of these tapes side by side, creating a stronger artificial muscle that
they then placed inside a floating plastic case topped with shutters. Inside
the case, evaporating water made the air humid. The humidity caused the muscle
to elongate, opening the shutters and allowing the air to dry out. When the
humidity escaped, the spores shrunk and the tapes contracted, pulling the
shutters closed and allowing humidity to build again. A self-sustaining cycle
of motion was born.
With its current power output, the floating evaporation engine
could supply small floating lights or sensors at the ocean floor that monitor
the environment, Chen said, speculating that an improved version with stickier
plastic tape and more spores could potentially generate even more power per
unit area than a wind farm.
The Columbia team's other new evaporation-driven engine the
Moisture Mill contains a plastic wheel with protruding tabs of tape covered
on one side with spores. Half of the wheel sits in dry air, causing the tabs to
curve, and the other half sits in humid environment, where the tabs straighten.
As a result, the wheel rotates continuously, effectively acting as a rotary
engine.
The researchers next built a small toy car, powering it with the
Moisture Mill and were successful in getting the car to roll on its own,
powered only by evaporation. In the future, Sahin said, it may be possible to
design en gines that use the mechanical energy stored in spores to propel a
full-sized vehicle. Such an engine, if achieved, would require neither fuel to
burn nor an electrical battery.
A larger version of the Moisture Mill could also produce
electricity, Sahin said, suggesting a wheel that sits above a large body of
water and evapo rates saltwater, causing the wheel to rotate and generate elec
tricity. This development would steadily produce as much electricity as a wind
turbine, Sahin said.
MM19JUN15
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