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High Voltages Generated by Moving Water Drops

05.12.2023, 15:15
25m
TU Berlin

TU Berlin

Sprecher

Stefan Weber (MPI for Polymer Research Mainz) Pravash Bista

Beschreibung

Water drops sliding on insulating, hydrophobic substrates can become electrically charged [1–3]. Despite many decades of research, this spontaneous electrification of moving drops is still far from being understood. By precisely measuring charge and voltage, we found that moving water drops accumulate a voltage of several kilovolts after sliding for just a few centimeters. To enable an efficient utilization of this simple electric energy generation mechanism, a detailed and quantitative understanding of the underlying physical process would be required. Using a simple electrostatic model, we show that the drop voltage is fundamentally connected to the properties of the electrostatic double layer at solid-liquid interfaces. The observation of high drop voltages will have important implications for energy harvesting applications, as well as droplet microfluidics and electrostatic discharge protection.

[1] A. Z. Stetten, D. S. Golovko, S. A. L. Weber, and H.-J. Butt, Slide Electrification: Charging of Surfaces by Moving Water Drops, Soft Matter 15, 8667 (2019).
[2] D. Díaz, D. Garcia-Gonzalez, P. Bista, S. A. L. Weber, H.-J. Butt, A. Stetten, and M. Kappl, Charging of Drops Impacting onto Superhydrophobic Surfaces, Soft Matter 18, 1628 (2022).
[3] X. Li et al., Spontaneous Charging Affects the Motion of Sliding Drops, Nat. Phys. 1 (2022).

Hauptautor

Stefan Weber (MPI for Polymer Research Mainz)

Co-Autor

Präsentationsmaterialien

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