Energy Harvesting with a Liquid-Metal Microfluidic Influence Machine

Abstract

We describe and demonstrate an alternative energy-harvesting technology based on a microfluidic realization of a Wimshurst influence machine. The prototype device converts the mechanical energy of a pressure-driven flow into electrical energy, using a multiphase system composed of droplets of liquid mercury surrounded by insulating oil. Electrostatic induction between adjacent metal droplets drives charge through external electrode paths, resulting in continuous charge amplification and collection. We demonstrate a power output of 4 nW from the initial prototype and present calculations suggesting that straightforward device optimization could increase the power output by more than 3 orders of magnitude. At that level, the power efficiency of this energy-harvesting mechanism, limited by viscous dissipation, could exceed 90%. The microfluidic context enables straightforward scaling and parallelization, as well as hydraulic matching to a variety of ambient mechanical energy sources, such as human locomotion.

ICB Affiliated Authors

Authors
Christopher Conner, Tim de Visser, Joshua Loessberg, Sam Sherman, Andrew Smith, Shuo Ma, Maria Teresa Napoli, Sumita Pennathur, and David Weld
Date
Type
Peer-Reviewed Article
Journal
Physical Review Applied
Volume
9
Emblems