Potential Energy

Generating Power from Electricity in the Air

A researcher describes a potential new source of renewable energy.

Kevin Bullis 08/25/2010

  • 14 Comments

Lightning is a powerful manifestation of the electrical charge that can accumulate in the atmosphere. New research, presented at the ACS meeting in Boston on Wednesday, suggests that it might be possible to harness that electrical charge.

Fernando Galembeck, of the University of Campinas in Brazil, has shown that water vapor in humid air can accumulate charge and transfer it to materials it comes in contact with. He says it might be possible to design collectors that exploit this behavior to generate electricity. The technology, which he calls "hygroelectricity" could provide an alternative to solar power in places without much sunlight but with a lot of humidity. It could also be used to prevent lightning strikes, he says, by draining electrical charge out of the air. He notes, however, that the research is very early stage and that such technology could be a long time coming.

Here's the abstract from his paper:

Many experimental reports associate water-air interfaces with electrostatic phenomena, from "steam electricity" recorded in the 19th century and Kelvin water drop condenser to the close association between heavy clouds and thunderstorms. However, accepted physical-chemical mechanisms for charge build-up and dissipation at water-air interfaces are still lacking. This report shows that: 1) water vapor adsorption on dielectrics or isolated metal surfaces enclosed within a shielded and grounded environment causes charge accumulation on the solid, depending on the relative humidity (RH), nature of the substrate and exposure time. 2) A steep charge increase is observed in liquid and solid insulators under the action of external fields when RH approaches 100%. These results are in agreement with the hypothesis of water acquiring charge during adsorption and condensation, due to partition of aqueous ions.

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22 Comments

  • 531 Days Ago
  • 08/27/2010

Curious

I've been wondering, we've been using electricity to power our devices until now. Couldn't there be a way to power our devices with photons? Instead of having to convert solar radiation into electric current first? I don't know much, just curious.

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edwardborland

7 Comments

  • 531 Days Ago
  • 08/27/2010

Storage

I wonder how the energy might be collected.  What kind of device might be used? A lightning rod with a big capacitor? I imagine being struck by lightning might result in a lot of power but happen infrequently?

Does anyone have any thoughts on how such a charge caught from the air might be stored, the effiency of the process and the size of such a resource compared with alternative energy sources?

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  • 526 Days Ago
  • 09/01/2010

Re: Storage

As a charge builds up in the earth and and the air, and looks for a path to connect the two opposing charges, seems to me you should be able to use the current that is generated to do some kind of work, or charge some batteries, etc.  Very sporadic though.

Reply

blurden

1 Comment

  • 531 Days Ago
  • 08/27/2010

Tesla Anyone?

Wardenclyffe Tower...

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mutant5776

3 Comments

  • 528 Days Ago
  • 08/30/2010

Re: Tesla Anyone?

Lets keep reinventing the wheel.  They should be going back and use what was already designed and work on making it work better.  I hate it when they waste money doing rework. grrrrr

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garysoaring

38 Comments

  • 531 Days Ago
  • 08/27/2010

New Technology?

Are we not forgetting someone by the name of Nikola Tesla who tried to do the same thing way back when?  He had a 1930 Pierce Arrow that supposedly ran on energy pulled in via an antenna that gathered energy from the earths atmosphere or magnetic field.  He had a giant version of the antenna system set up on the East Coast that was to do a similar thing - provide free energy for everyone.  The story goes that J.P. Morgan helped to kill the project because one could not make money from free energy. 

Long live Nikola Tesla!

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alegor

1 Comment

  • 531 Days Ago
  • 08/27/2010

Re: New Technology?

John Galt called, he wants his atmospheric electricity generator back...

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alieis

1 Comment

  • 531 Days Ago
  • 08/27/2010

Re: New Technology?

Yes, Tesla attempted to, but did not succeed in doing it.

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garylynn

43 Comments

  • 531 Days Ago
  • 08/27/2010

Go fly a kite...

Fly a kite into a promising cloud and hang a key on the string? 
G

Reply

mattgroom

289 Comments

  • 530 Days Ago
  • 08/28/2010

Yes heres my 2c

Put one-way conductive electrical and (tutherway) heat conductive strings together in lines and see if the heat going up is enough to create a lovely charge going down the string whens its humid.

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andytuc

1 Comment

  • 530 Days Ago
  • 08/28/2010

Credit to Ayn Rand


This approach was described by Ayn Rand in 1957, Atlas Shrugged, John Galt the inventor of the electric motor that gets energy from static electricity in the air!
Let's give her some credit!!!

Andy

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rsanchez1

213 Comments

  • 528 Days Ago
  • 08/30/2010

great idea

You gotta wonder why no one will develop this sort of technology. As a previous poster said, you can't make money off free energy. Then again, you can charge for maintenance of the energy collectors. Mechanics don't do a 100% job anyway to guarantee you can come back, seems like that could be a revenue source.

Anyway, this reminds me of something I saw on TV, on the sci-fi show Stargate Atlantis. Basically, there was this huge storm coming to the city of Atlantis and a huge tidal wave came close to destroying the city. There were no power sources to power the city's shields, but they found out that lightning rods throughout the city can be hooked up to giant capacitors that can take the full charge in lightning and power the city. The lightning strikes came and boom, city saved.

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AVE_fan

1 Comment

  • 523 Days Ago
  • 09/04/2010

power out of thin air

I can't believe there is so much ignorance regarding the forms that energy, contained in the air (troposphere), can take from Technology Review readers.  As a primer--

Ref-- http://tornadochaser.net/capeclass.html

A means for harvesting it and generating electricity from it before becoming highly charged has also been invented and patented.

Ref-- http://vortexengine.ca

You might also be interested in reading--

http://greeneconomypost.com/atmospheric-vortex-engine-how-to-recover-hidden-energy-urban-heat-island-7468.htm

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martyw

1 Comment

  • 471 Days Ago
  • 10/26/2010

/as /above

Stripping the natural resource in this case lightening out of the air sounds good on a small scale..Consider the implications if it (stripping lightening out of the air) became commonplace)..Our planet is continuously evolving and what is has evolved with the lightening being part of the whole system..The ozone smell noticeable after a severe lightening event must have some signifigance to life as we know it..The changeing of gaseous nitrogen in the atmosphere to a more useful to plants growth form of nitrogen is probably more vital than we realize both on the land and to the phytoplankton of our oceans..There is always a price to pay for enregy transferance..Locally not an issue but globally probablly problematic in the longer term..
Martyw

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Bio

Kevin Bullis is Technology Review’s energy editor.

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