posted on 2025-01-15, 08:32authored byFei Yu, Liying Wang, Xijia Yang, Yue Yang, Xuesong Li, Yang Gao, Yi Jiang, Ke Jiang, Wei Lü, Xiaojuan Sun, Dabing Li
Moisture-electric generators (MEGs) generate power by
adsorbing
water from the air. However, their performance at low temperatures
is hindered due to icing. In the present work, MEG arrays are developed
by laser engraving techniques and a modulated low-temperature hydrogel
as the absorbent material. LTH effectively captures moisture and maintains
ion dissociation and migration even at subzero temperatures. Based
on the double electric layer pseudocapacitance model, the oscillating
circuit theory is introduced to explain the effects of moisture absorption,
evaporation, and ion migration on the output current of the MEG, and
the circuit calculations are matched with the experimental results.
Molecular dynamics simulations indicate that LTH’s low-temperature
stability results from preferential hydrogen bonding between glycerol
molecules and H2O, which disrupts H2O–H2O hydrogen bonds and slows water crystallization. A single
MEG unit (0.25 cm2) can produce up to ∼0.8 V and
∼21.2 μW/cm2 at room temperature, and at −35
°C with 16% RH, it generates ∼0.58 V and ∼14.35
μA. MEG realizes the following applications: MEG successfully
drives electronic devices in snow; arrays of 16 MEGs can power portable
electronics, and 384 MEGs can achieve up to 210 V; MEG absorbs moisture
in water and drives LEDs by blowing up; MEG has a flexible wearable
nature; MEG is used for respiratory monitoring and photoelectric sensors.