23.02.2021
Nature has developed porous biomaterials, especially in the plant kingdom, which can directly gain mechanical energy for movement from moisture changes in their environment, such as between day and night or between dry and rainy seasons. For example, some plant germs bury themselves autonomously in the soil only by using water condensation and evaporation energy, without requiring any external energy. As part of a European consortium, researchers at TU Hamburg now want to develop artificial porous materials and nanofluidic processes that utilise moisture fluctuations in such natural processes, but also in technical processes, in order to generate electrical energy that can be used directly by humans.
Solution: Nanoporous materials and phase transitions of aqueous electrolytes
The solution could be a radically new technology. For this, the international team is investigating cycles of wetting and drying of electrically conductive, nanoporous materials, such as made of silicon or carbon. "We are exploring how water and aqueous electrolytes, such as brine, are driven by capillary forces to penetrate and thus moisten the smallest pores, which in cross-section hold only 50 water molecules. This increases the contact area between the liquid and the electrically conductive pore wall. Conversely, the opposite effect occurs during drying. The contact area decreases. If the electrical charge layers on the nanopore walls that build up and break down in this way are skilfully guided, electrical energy can be generated directly from these cycles," explains Patrick Huber, Professor and head of the Physics and High-Resolution X-ray Analytics of Functional Materials research group at TU Hamburg and DESY.
Nanoporous materials can be compared to sponges, which consist of millions of tiny pores. One cubic centimetre of these can have an entire football field of inner surface. "This property means that the contact areas between liquid and solid and thus the electrical capacities per volume are very large. The energy conversion per wetting and drying cycle is therefore very efficient," explains the TU professor.
"Climate change faces us with the challenge of using as few fossil fuels and thus CO2 production as necessary for the production of electrical energy. At the same time, a large proportion of the primary energy is emitted into the environment as waste heat, for example, and additionally heats it up to the detriment of the climate. Within the framework of this project, we want to change this by developing and researching new materials in combination with clever process control of drying and humidification cycles on the nanoscale, for example using industrial waste heat," Huber continues.
Application of the new technology
This new technology can be used in many ways and on a large scale. On the one hand, the condensation of water is conceivable in a closed circuit from pore space to pore space. This would make it possible to use it in closed rooms or very hot areas, for example to use the waste heat from mainframe computers or the heat in desert regions for sustainable energy production. On the other hand, it would also be possible to realise a material surface that is permeable to the outside. In this way, the material interior could be supplied with liquid from morning dew by the natural day and night rhythm. If the outside temperature then rises, the water evaporates and electrical energy is generated. Surfaces that are moistened in the natural rhythm of the tides at high tide and dry again at low tide would also be ideal for this purpose.
The research project "Energy harvesting via wetting/drying cycles with nanoporous electrodes EAWEDRY" is funded by the hotly contested EU funding programme "Future & Emerging Technologies (FET-Open)", a programme that supports interdisciplinary research projects with bold visions for the future that are expected to lead to technological breakthroughs. The project is funded with a total of almost 3 million euros over four years. In addition to the TU Hamburg and DESY (working group Professor Patrick Huber), the University of Hamburg (working group Professor Michael Fröba), the Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya, Barcelona (working group Professor Andriy Yaroshchuk), the Catalonia Institute for Energy Research (working group Professor Andreu Cabot), the Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1 (working group Professor Olivier Vincent), the F.D. Ovharenko Institute of Bio-Colloid Chemistry (Ukraine) and two industrial partners are involved in the international consortium.
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