Low-grade wind-driven directional flow in anchored droplets.
Shan PengBinglin XieYanlei WangMi WangXiaoxin ChenXiaoyu JiChenyang ZhaoGang LuDianyu WangRuiran HaoMingzhan WangNan HuHongyan HeYulong DingShuang ZhengPublished in: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (2023)
Low-grade wind with airspeed V wind < 5 m/s, while distributed far more abundantly, is still challenging to extract because current turbine-based technologies require particular geography (e.g., wide-open land or off-shore regions) with year-round V wind > 5 m/s to effectively rotate the blades. Here, we report that low-speed airflow can sensitively enable directional flow within nanowire-anchored ionic liquid (IL) drops. Specifically, wind-induced air/liquid friction continuously raises directional leeward fluid transport in the upper portion, whereas three-phase contact line (TCL) pinning blocks further movement of IL. To remove excessive accumulation of IL near TCL, fluid dives, and headwind flow forms in the lower portion, as confirmed by microscope observation. Such stratified circulating flow within single drop can generate voltage output up to ~0.84 V, which we further scale up to ~60 V using drop "wind farms". Our results demonstrate a technology to tap the widespread low-grade wind as a reliable energy resource.