| Literature DB >> 30424328 |
Huicong Liu1, Jiankang Zhang2, Qiongfeng Shi3,4,5,6, Tianyiyi He7,8,9,10, Tao Chen11, Lining Sun12, Jan A Dziuban13, Chengkuo Lee14,15,16,17.
Abstract
A hybrid energy harvester is presented in this paper to harvest energy from water flow motion and temperature difference in an irrigating pipe at the same time. The harvester is based on the integration of thermoelectric and electromagnetic mechanisms. To harvest the water flow motion, a turbine fan with magnets that are attached on the blades is placed inside of the water pipe. Multiple coils turn the water flow energy into electricity with the rotation of the turbine. The thermoelectric generators (TEGs) are attached around the pipe, so as to harvest energy due to temperature difference. For a maximum temperature difference of 55 °C (hot side 80 °C and room temperature 25 °C), twelve serial-connected TEGs can generate voltage up to 0.346 V. Under a load resistance of 20 Ώ, the power output of 1.264 mW can be achieved. For a maximum water flow rate of 49.9 L/min, the electromagnetic generator (EMG) can produce an open circuit voltage of 0.911 V. The EMG can be potentially used as a water flow meter due to the linear relationship between water flow rate and output voltage. Under the joint action of TEG and EMG, the maximum terminal voltage for TEG is 66 mV and for EMG is 241 mV at load resistances of 10 and 100 Ώ, respectively, resulting in a corresponding power output of 0.435 and 0.584 mW.Entities:
Keywords: electromagnetic; hybrid energy harvester; thermoelectric; water flow
Year: 2018 PMID: 30424328 PMCID: PMC6187654 DOI: 10.3390/mi9080395
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Micromachines (Basel) ISSN: 2072-666X Impact factor: 2.891
Figure 1Diagram of hybrid energy harvester in irrigating pipe (a) Schematic diagram of hybrid energy harvester; (b) Three-dimensional (3-D) structure of thermoelectric generator (TEG); (c) Structural diagram of electromagnetic generator (EMG); and, (d) Photo of hybrid energy harvester.
Figure 2(a) Schematic diagram of EMG; and, (b) Simulation of the magnetic flux of one magnet across a single coil by COMSOL.
Figure 3Open circuit voltages of TEG with the hot side placed directly on Al and on thermal glue.
Figure 4Open circuit voltages of TEG with and without thermal grease attached on the cold side.
Figure 5Open circuit voltages of TEGs with different hot side temperatures.
Performance of TEGs with different hot side temperatures.
| Hot Side Temperature (°C) | Maximum Open Circuit Voltage (mV) | Voltage after 200 s (mV) | Percentage |
|---|---|---|---|
| 80 | 155 | 114.025 | 73.56% |
| 75 | 147 | 109.225 | 74.30% |
| 70 | 131 | 102.275 | 78.07% |
| 65 | 110 | 83.15 | 75.59% |
| 60 | 97 | 77.375 | 79.77% |
| 55 | 86 | 69.025 | 80.20% |
| 50 | 69 | 53.75 | 77.90% |
Figure 6(a) Voltage and (b) power outputs of TEGs under different load resistances.
Figure 7Open circuit voltage of EMG for single-magnet in opposite direction and double-magnet in same direction.
Figure 8(a) Voltage and (b) power of EMG with different load resistances.
Figure 9Terminal voltage and power of EMG against water flow rate.
Figure 10Testing scenario of the collective performance of TEG and EMG.
Figure 11(a) Collective open circuit voltage of EMG and TEG; and, (b) Collective output voltage of TEG and EMG under load resistance of 10 and 100 Ω.