Issue 7, 2018

Electrical current nanogeneration driven by spontaneous nanofluidic oscillations

Abstract

Exploiting natural phenomena is a central route for providing electricity to sustainably drive wearable electronics. Here we report a nano-scale water-driven energy generator that produces tiny electrical currents from spontaneous wetting–drying oscillations in mesoporous thin films. The system was fabricated with a wormlike mesoporous silica film, which was packed in between Cu and silicon contacts. The nanogenerator runs autonomously when a water droplet is laid over the film close to the Cu electrode, as water infiltration into the film under the electrode produces a direct-current. Wetting–drying cycles, which are spontaneously triggered by water evaporation, are perfectly correlated to the generated electrical current. The autonomous water displacement through the film yields a sustained energy conversion until the droplet reservoir vanishes. This novel water-driven nanogenerator opens new alternatives for versatile, mobile and cost-effective self-powering of nanosystems and nanodevices.

Graphical abstract: Electrical current nanogeneration driven by spontaneous nanofluidic oscillations

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Communication
Submitted
10 Jan 2018
Accepted
18 Jan 2018
First published
23 Jan 2018

Nanoscale, 2018,10, 3144-3147

Electrical current nanogeneration driven by spontaneous nanofluidic oscillations

R. Gimenez, M. Mercuri, C. L. A. Berli and M. G. Bellino, Nanoscale, 2018, 10, 3144 DOI: 10.1039/C8NR00269J

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