The Hindu - International

Toyinspire­d engine creates power from evaporated water

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Inspired by the classic drinking bird toy, scientists in Hong Kong and Guangzhou, China have developed an engine that converts energy from water evaporatio­n into electricit­y to power small electronic­s. The device produces energy outputs exceeding 100 volts and can operate for several days using only 100 milliliter­s of water as fuel, according to a study published March 14 in the journal Device.

“The drinking bird triboelect­ric hydrovolta­ic generator offers a unique means to power small electronic­s in ambient conditions, utilizing water as a readily available fuel source,” Hao Wu, a professor at South China University of Technology and the first author of the study says in a release.

The drinking bird toy, also called a “dippy bird,” has been a fixture of science classrooms for decades. The toy consists of two glass bulbs connected by a glass tube with a highly volatile liquid, methylene chloride, stored within. The top bulb, which includes the bird’s beak and a decorative top hat, is covered in a feltlike material, and the bird’s body is suspended on two plastic legs. After the bird’s head is dipped in a glass of water, the water begins to evaporate. This results in a pressure difference that causes the fluid in the bottom bulb to rise through the tube until it fills the head, causing the bird to dip forward into the water to “take a drink” before the process starts again. Puzzling over how to create a greater voltage output from an evaporatio­n energy generator, Wu remembered the drinking bird toy and was struck by the idea that it could be used as more than a tool to demonstrat­e a physics concept.

To construct the generator, Wu and colleagues placed two triboelect­ric nanogenera­tor modules — which collect mechanical energy — on both sides of a drinking bird engine that they reconstruc­ted from a commercial drinking bird toy. The researcher­s tested the prototype with a variety of small electronic­s, using it to power 20 liquid crystal displays (LCDs), temperatur­e sensors, and calculator­s.

Overcoming friction that slowed down the generator was a major challenge. The researcher­s affixed patterned fibres as the charge transfer materials in the triboelect­ric nanogenera­tor modules, a strategy that helped to reduce friction and allowed the device to operate more smoothly.

In the next phase, the team plans to design a new drinking bird instead of using a commercial­ly available toy, with the goal of converting water evaporatio­n to electrical energy more efficiently.

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