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Harnessing Hamster Power with a Nanogenerator

Researchers use a running rodent to test their device.

By Katherine Bourzac

Wednesday, February 11, 2009

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Sunlight, wind, and waves aren't the only sources of renewable energy. For researchers hoping to power nanoscale devices, there's also muscle power.

Muscle power: This hamster is wearing a jacket affixed to a nanogenerator that harvests biomechanical energy as it runs on an exercise wheel.
Credit: Zhong Lin Wang
Multimedia
video  Watch a running hamster generate energy.

Every heartbeat and every fidgety movement that a person makes while sitting at a computer carries with it a small amount of energy that could potentially be scavenged. However, harvesting this biomotion is challenging because so much of it is irregular. Now, for the first time, researchers have demonstrated that a nanogenerator can be driven by irregular, low-energy biomotion, including the tapping of a human finger and a hamster's erratic running and scratching.

The researchers' nanogenerator harnesses the piezoelectric effect--the way some crystalline materials produce an electrical potential when placed under mechanical stress. The team, led by Zhong Lin Wang, a professor of materials science and engineering at Georgia Tech, has been making generators using piezoelectric nanowires since 2005. The latest nanogenerator consists of a series of zinc-oxide nanowires mounted on top of a flexible plastic surface. The wires are connected to one another and to an external electrical circuit by metal electrodes. When the plastic bends, the wires bend too, and this motion creates an electrical potential in the wires that drives current through the external circuit.

In a paper published online this week in the journal Nano Letters, Wang's group describes using the nanogenerator to harvest different kinds of biomechanical energy. The researchers attached the nanogenerator to a person's index finger and recorded the power output when it tapped on a surface. They also harvested energy from a hamster wearing a small jacket affixed to the device as the rodent ran on an exercise wheel and scratched itself.

Other researchers have developed piezoelectric cantilevers that can also harvest biomechanical energy, but these systems rely on regular mechanical resonance at a specific frequency. Most biomotion--stretching muscles, swinging arms, walking, even the beating of a heart--produces mechanical energy that's more irregular. Wang says that his group has made the first generator that can truly harvest small, irregular motions.

The energy generated by the device is currently small (about a nanowatt), but Wang says that this is still an important step along the road to developing useful power sources for nanoscale devices. Exquisitely sensitive nanoscale sensors require very little power--about a microwatt--to do things like detect pathogens or cancer proteins. But part of what's holding back their development is the size and lifetime of existing power supplies. Implantable nanosensors need a power source that is both nanosized and long-lasting, eliminating the need for it to be surgically removed and replaced.

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Wang's group hasn't made an implantable version of the nanogenerator yet, but Wang says that, in theory, it should be possible. The nanogenerators might, for instance, be encased in biocompatible polymers and implanted in muscle tissue.

The researchers are working on increasing the power of the device by adding more piezoelectric wires arranged in series. In addition to powering nanoscale devices, the piezoelectric generators could perhaps be coupled to larger devices. Over the next five to ten years, Wang hopes to significantly boost the power output of the generator so that it could be woven into the fabric of a human-sized jacket and harvest enough energy to charge batteries for portable electronic devices.

Comments

  • Powering the world with hamsters
    Oliver Wendell Jones thought of this years ago.

    Too bad hamsters are allergic to raisins.
    Rate this comment: 12345

    tjbiehler
    02/11/2009
    Posts:2
    Avg Rating:
    2/5
  • hamsters
    Power and fertilizer in one tiny package.
    Rate this comment: 12345

    millikenrese...
    02/11/2009
    Posts:9
    Avg Rating:
    3/5
  • error
    The audio file of this article seems to be missing. Only the title part is there. Please check!
    Rate this comment: 12345

    hongyi
    02/11/2009
    Posts:1
    Avg Rating:
    5/5
    • Re: error
      hongyi,

      Thanks for catching the missing audio file. We are getting this fixed now, it should be working soon.

      Brittany
      Rate this comment: 12345

      Brittany Sau...
      02/11/2009
      Posts:33
      Avg Rating:
      4/5
  • Hum...
    One step closer to self-replicating nano entity. Ala, one little side effect could be that... all the bio living things could become its food source for its perpetuation. Best hope is to have a parasite relationship with them, perhaps.
    Rate this comment: 12345

    mit4a
    02/12/2009
    Posts:2
    Avg Rating:
    2/5
  • battery charger
    Let's get serious about applications. Put them under the heels of the insoles of your hiking boots and use the energy to charge your many batteries on cloudy or forested days.
    Rate this comment: 12345

    walt
    02/14/2009
    Posts:35
    Avg Rating:
    2/5
  • Wich is the point?
    Well, after reading this article I began to recall an old Italian movie directed by Pasquale Festa Campanile in 1975, shortly after the first big energy crisis of 1973. The title of this comedy is "Conviene far bene l'amore", but is kwown in the English-speaking world as "The Sex Machine".

    The plot is simple: a crazy scientist invents a device to harness the energy spent by humans while...making love, thus solving any problems of energy shortage. I suspect that if such a device could really be built it could actually solve all known problems of global warning and the like.

    More seriously, I fail to understand wich is the point of the invention, provided that they exist and are widely used devices capable of powering, for example, a wrist watch using the kinetic energy provided by the bearer. See for example the US Patent 5,740,132 and all related patents.

    Being electro-mechanical parts, they certainly have some drawbacks compared with the piezoelectric device of the article, but no doubt they can generate much more energy for the same size and weight. This is because all piezoelectric materials I know of have a very high internal impedance, thus they cannot act efficiently as power-generating devices. In fact they are usually used as sensors to generate a small voltage wich is to be amplified by a separate stage.

    Rate this comment: 12345

    eliraul
    02/16/2009
    Posts:4
    Avg Rating:
    4/5
    • Re: Wich is the point?
      I guess the point is to provide nanosize power supply for NEMS devices and to hopefully develop distributed power generators.
      Rate this comment: 12345

      zhpqin
      02/19/2009
      Posts:1
  • Good Technology for Watches
    Hopefully they target the watch market with this technology! 
    Cheap Generators the size of a watch battery are all that is needed!
    Brian Glassman
    Innovation Management
    Commercialization
    Rate this comment: 12345

    briang1621
    03/14/2009
    Posts:124
    Avg Rating:
    4/5
  • Matrix with hamsters
    10 million hamsters = 1D cell battery !
     
    Rate this comment: 12345

    briang1621
    03/14/2009
    Posts:124
    Avg Rating:
    4/5
  • [no subject]
    The plot is simple: a crazy scientist invents a device to harness the energy spent by humans while...making love, thus solving any problems of energy shortage. I suspect that if such a device could really be built it could actually solve all known problems of global warning and the like.
    Rate this comment: 12345

    GarryWert
    08/29/2009
    Posts:8
    Avg Rating:
    1/5
  • People Power
    The Nanogenerator looks like a perfect solution to harnessing the energy expended by people. I recently had an article on this on the Glimmer Site. Can we have solutions to this from our readers?
    http://glimmersite.com/2009/12/04/guest-blogger-capturing-energy-expended-by-people/remix/
    There is so much energy expended and so little captured. Nanogenerators could help conserve existing energy. Enegy saved is energy gained. Kudos for the good work by the Citizens of the World
    Rate this comment: 12345

    dancrissco
    01/02/2010
    Posts:35
    Avg Rating:
    4/5

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