Monday, 7 October 2013
On 07:22 by Asveth Sreiram No comments
The finding is reported in a paper in the journal Nature Communications written by MIT postdoc Nenad Miljkovic, mechanical engineering professor Evelyn Wang, and two others.
Miljkovic says this was an extension of previous work by the MIT team. That work showed that under certain conditions, rather than simply sliding down and separating from a surface due to gravity, droplets can actually leap away from it. This occurs when droplets of water condense onto a metal surface with a specific kind of superhydrophobic coating and at least two of the droplets coalesce: They can then spontaneously jump from the surface, as a result of a release of excess surface energy.
In the new work, "We found that when these droplets jump, through analysis of high-speed video, we saw that they repel one another midflight," Miljkovic says. "Previous studies have shown no such effect. When we first saw that, we were intrigued."
In order to understand the reason for the repulsion between jumping droplets after they leave the surface, the researchers performed a series of experiments using a charged electrode. Sure enough, when the electrode had a positive charge, droplets were repelled by it as well as by each other; when it had a negative charge, the droplets were drawn toward it. This established that the effect was caused by a net positive electrical charge forming on the droplets as they jumped away from the surface.
The charging process takes place because as droplets form on a surface, Miljkovic says, they naturally form an electric double layer -- a layer of paired positive and negative charges -- on their surfaces. When neighboring drops coalesce, which leads to their jumping from the surface, that process happens "so fast that the charge separates," he says. "It leaves a bit of charge on the droplet, and the rest on the surface."
The initial finding that droplets could jump from a condenser surface -- a component at the heart of most of the world's electricity-generating power plants -- provided a mechanism for enhancing the efficiency of heat transfer on those condensers, and thus improving power plants' overall efficiency. The new finding now provides a way of enhancing that efficiency even more: By applying the appropriate charge to a nearby metal plate, jumping droplets can be pulled away from the surface, reducing the likelihood of their being pushed back onto the condenser either by gravity or by the drag created by the flow of the surrounding vapor toward the surface, Miljkovic says.
"Now we can use an external electric field to mitigate" any tendency of the droplets to return to the condenser, "and enhance the heat transfer," he says.
But the finding also suggests another possible new application, Miljkovic says: By placing two parallel metal plates out in the open, with "one surface that has droplets jumping, and another that collects them … you could generate some power" just from condensation from the ambient air. All that would be needed is a way of keeping the condenser surface cool, such as water from a nearby lake or river. "You just need a cold surface in a moist environment," he says. "We're working on demonstrating this concept."
The research team also included graduate student Daniel Preston and Ryan Enright, who was a postdoc at MIT and the University of Limerick and is now at Bell Labs Ireland, part of Alcatel-Lucent. The work received funding from the U.S. Department of Energy through the MIT Solid-State Solar-Thermal Energy Conversion Center, the Office of Naval Research and the National Science Foundation
.
.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Search
Popular Posts
-
A team of scientists using NASA's Hubble Space Telescope has made the most detailed global map yet of the glow from a planet orbiti...
-
Aug. 29, 2013 — The age at which children learn a second language can have a significant bearing on the structure of their adult brain, ...
-
Nov. 2, 2013 — It doesn't take a Watson to realize that even the world's best supercomputers are staggeringly inefficient and ene...
-
Oct. 3, 2013 — Scientists have revealed nearly 100 genetic variants implicated in the development of cancers such as breast cancer and pr...
-
Nov. 1, 2013 — It was once thought that each cell in a person's body possesses the same DNA code and that the particular way the geno...
-
Oct. 30, 2013 — Video gaming causes increases in the brain regions responsible for spatial orientation, memory formation and strategic pl...
-
What you'll need: A plastic comb (or an inflated balloon) A narrow stream of water from a tap Dry hair Instructions: Tu...
-
Aug. 26, 2013 — Where did the Chelyabinsk meteorite come from? As a meteoroid, it either collided with another body in the solar system ...
-
Dec. 13, 2013 — South Pole Telescope scientists have detected for the first time a subtle distortion in the oldest light in the universe,...
-
This image shows two of the galaxy clusters Aug. 1, 2013 — Our universe is filled with gobs of galaxies, bound together by gravity...
Recent Posts
Sample Text
Blog Archive
-
▼
2013
(421)
-
▼
October
(35)
- Smart Neurons: Single Neuronal Dendrites Can Perfo...
- New Kit Predicts Most Common Lung Cancer Survival
- Bee Sting Allergy Could Be a Defense Response Gone...
- Fungus That Causes White-Nose Syndrome in Bats Pro...
- Monkey That Purrs Like a Cat Is Among New Species ...
- Ghostly Shape of 'Coldest Place in the Universe' R...
- Scientists Solve Mystery of Odd Patterns of Oxygen...
- Bees Underwent Massive Extinctions When Dinosaurs Did
- Unprecedented Arctic Warming: Average Summer Tempe...
- Need Different Types of Tissue? Just Print Them!
- Astronomers Discover the Most Distant Known Galaxy...
- Gilding the Gum Tree: Scientists Strike Gold in Le...
- How Did Supermassive Black Holes Grow So Big?
- Scientist Uncovers Internal Clock Able to Measure ...
- Gravitational Waves Help Us Understand Black-Hole ...
- Curiosity Confirms Origins of Martian Meteorites
- Extinct 'Mega Claw' Creature Had Spider-Like Brain
- New Light On Star Death: Super-Luminous Supernovae...
- Glowing Neurons Reveal Networked Link Between Brai...
- Software Uses Cyborg Swarm to Map Unknown Environs
- ALMA Probes Mysteries of Jets from Giant Black Holes
- How the Largest Star Known Is Tearing Itself Apart
- Astronomers Find Clues to Decades-Long Coronal Hea...
- World Ocean Systems Undermined by Climate Change b...
- Scientists Unravel Mechanisms in Chronic Itching
- Surprisingly Simple Scheme for Self-Assembling Robots
- Astronomers Discover Large 'Hot' Cocoon Around a S...
- Climate Puzzle Over Origins of Life On Earth
- Sieving Through 'Junk' DNA Reveals Disease-Causing...
- Discovery of Charged Droplets Could Lead to More E...
- New Fossils Push the Origin of Flowering Plants Ba...
- Breakthrough in Photonics Could Allow for Faster a...
- Better Protein Creation May Be Secret of Longevity...
- First Cloud Map of a Planet Beyond Our Solar System
- Cold, Salty and Promiscuous: Gene-Shuffling Microb...
-
▼
October
(35)
0 comments:
Post a Comment