Scientists find way to make energy from air using nearly any material

By Dan Rosenzweig-Ziff  May 26, 2023

https://www.washingtonpost.com/science/2023/05/26/harvest-energy-thin-air


Nearly any material can be used to turn the energy in air humidity into 
electricity, scientists found in a discovery that could lead to continuously 
producing clean energy with little pollution.

The research, published in a paper in Advanced Materials, builds on 2020 work 
that first showed energy could be pulled from the moisture in the air using 
material harvested from bacteria.

Paper: https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1002/adma.202300748

The new study shows nearly any material can be used, like wood or silicon, as 
long as it can be smashed into small particles and remade with microscopic 
pores. But there are many questions about how to scale the product.

“What we have invented, you can imagine it’s like a small-scale, man-made 
cloud,” said Jun Yao, a professor of engineering at the University of 
Massachusetts at Amherst and the senior author of the study.

“This is really a very easily accessible, enormous source of continuous clean 
electricity. Imagine having clean electricity available wherever you go.”

That could include a forest, while hiking on a mountain, in a desert, in a 
rural village or on the road.

The air-powered generator, known as an “Air-gen,” would offer continuous clean 
electricity since it uses the energy from humidity, which is always present, 
rather than depending on the sun or wind.

Unlike solar panels or wind turbines, which need specific environments to 
thrive, Air-gens could conceivably go anywhere, Yao said.

Less humidity, though, would mean less energy could be harvested, he added. 
Winters, with dryer air, would produce less energy than summers.

The device, the size of a fingernail and thinner than a single hair, is dotted 
with tiny holes known as nanopores. The holes have a diameter smaller than 100 
nanometers, or less than a thousandth of the width of a strand of human hair.

The tiny holes allow the water in the air to pass through in a way that would 
create a charge imbalance in the upper and lower parts of the device, 
effectively creating a battery that runs continuously.

“We are opening up a wide door for harvesting clean electricity from thin air,” 
Xiaomeng Liu, another author and a UMass engineering graduate student, said in 
a statement.

While one prototype only produces a small amount of energy — almost enough to 
power a dot of light on a big screen — because of its size, Yao said Air-gens 
can be stacked on top of each other, potentially with spaces of air in between. 
Storing the electricity is a separate issue, he added.

Yao estimated that roughly 1 billion Air-gens, stacked to be roughly the size 
of a refrigerator, could produce a kilowatt and partly power a home in ideal 
conditions. The team hopes to lower both the number of devices needed and the 
space they take up by making the tool more efficient. Doing that could be a 
challenge.

The scientists first must work out which material would be most efficient to 
use in different climates. Eventually, Yao said he hopes to develop a strategy 
to make the device bigger without blocking the humidity that can be captured.

He also wants to figure out how to stack the devices on top of each other 
effectively and how to engineer the Air-gen so the same size device captures 
more energy.

It’s not clear how long that will take.

“Once we optimize this, you can put it anywhere,” Yao said.

It could be embedded in wall paint in a home, made at a larger scale in unused 
space in a city or littered throughout an office’s hard-to-get-to spaces.

And because it can use nearly any material, it could extract less from the 
environment than other renewable forms of energy.

“The entire earth is covered with a thick layer of humidity,” Yao said. “It’s 
an enormous source of clean energy. This is just the beginning in making use of 
that.”

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