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The Hindu
The Hindu
Technology
The Hindu Bureau

Toy-inspired engine creates power from evaporated water

Inspired by the classic drinking bird toy, scientists in Hong Kong and Guangzhou, China have developed an engine that efficiently converts energy from water evaporation into electricity to power small electronics. The device produces energy outputs exceeding 100 volts — much higher than other techniques that generate electricity from water — 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 offers 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 first author of the study says in a release.

The drinking bird toy, also called a “dippy bird,” has been a fixture 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 felt-like 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 difference that causes the fluid in the bottom bulb to rise through the tube until it fills 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 in the study. The researchers affixed patterned fibres 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 of their research, 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 efficiently.

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