Kármán Vortex Street Driven Membrane Triboelectric Nanogenerator for Enhanced Ultra-Low Speed Wind Energy Harvesting and Active Gas Flow Sensing

Abstract

[Image: see text] Wind energy harvesting and sensing have a huge prospect in constructing self-powered sensor nodes, but the energy transducing efficiency at low and ultra-low wind speeds is still limited. Herein, we proposed a Kármán vortex street driven membrane triboelectric nanogenerator (KVSM-TENG) for ultra-low speed wind energy harvesting and flow sensing. By introducing Kármán vortex in the KVSM-TENG, the cut-in wind speed of the KVSM-TENG decreased from 1 to 0.52 m/s that is the lowest cut-in wind speed in current TENGs. The instantaneous output density of the KVSM-TENG significantly increased by 1000 times and 2.65 times at the inlet wind speeds of 1 and 2 m/s, respectively. In addition, with the excellent energy transducing performance at the ultra-low speed range, the KVSM-TENG was successfully demonstrated to detect a weak leakage of gas pipeline (∼0.6 m/s) for alarming with high sensitivity. The interaction mechanism between the vortex and KVSM-TENG was systematically investigated. Through the simulation and experimental validation, the enhancement mechanism of vortex dependence on the cylinder diameter and placement location of KVSM-TENG was investigated in detail. The influence of parameters such as membrane length, width, thickness, and electrode gap on the performance of the KVSM-TENG was systematically studied. This work not only provided an ingenious strategy for ultra-low speed wind energy harvesting but also demonstrates the promising prospects for monitoring the air flow in the natural gas exploitation and transportation

    Similar works

    Available Versions

    Last time updated on 20/12/2022