World's smallest windmills to power cell phones (2024)

World's smallest windmills to power cell phones (2)

World's smallest windmills to power cell phones

World's smallest windmills to power cell phones (3)

1.8 mm-wide windmill on a US Lincoln penny (Photo: U of Texas at Arlington)

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Side view of a micro-windmill as seen in a scanning electron microscope (effective magnification about 1000X) (Photo: U of Texas at Arlington)

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Close up of a micro-windmill (Photo: U of Texas at Arlington)

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1.8 mm-wide windmill on a US Lincoln penny (Photo: U of Texas at Arlington)

While commercial wind turbines have been trending toward larger sizes, from 300 kW capacity in 1990 to 7.5 MW in 2011, sometimes it is worth bucking the trend. Professor J.C. Chiao and his postdoc Dr. Smitha Rao of the University of Texas at Arlington have taken this contrarian philosophy to the extreme. They have developed a MEMS-based nickel alloy windmill so small that 10 could be mounted on a single grain of rice. Aimed at very-small-scale energy harvesting applications, these windmills could recharge batteries for smartphones, and directly power ultra-low-power electronic devices.

The micro-windmills (technically called horizontal axis wind turbines) have a three-bladed rotor 1.8 mm in diameter mounted on a tower about 2 mm tall. The mount is a friction hub, but this probably becomes an air bearing when the rotor is spinning. The thickness of the windmills is about 100 microns.

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Despite their size, the micro-windmills can endure strong winds, owing to being constructed of a tough nickel alloy (rather than the silicon and silicon oxide layers typical of MEMS designs) and smart aerodynamic design. “The problem most MEMS designers have is that materials are too brittle,” Rao said. “With the nickel alloy, we don’t have that same issue. They’re very, very durable.” Several thousand such windmills could be made on a single 200-mm (8-inch) silicon wafer using Rao's clever design and primarily conventional MEMS fabrication processes, resulting in very low per unit prices.

Let's get to the meat. As amazing as these devices are, can they actually be of any use? Unfortunately, detailed design information on the micro-windmills does not seem to have been published as yet, and predicting the exact performance of a horizontal-axis wind turbine is still a bit of a magic art (in the absence of serious computer modeling.) However, I have put together some rough estimates to get a feel for the potential performance levels of such micro-windmills.

The first question is how much mechanical power can a micro-windmill generate from a moving flow of air. Betz' limit tells us that the theoretical maximum conversion efficiency given an argument based on conservation principles cannot be larger than 59.3 percent of the initial kinetic energy of the airflow.

Modern turbines can achieve around 45 percent conversion, but their design includes several areas of optimization that will likely to be absent in a MEMS windmill. For example, there are limits in forming the airfoil of the turbine blades, and the level of friction and rotor chatter resulting from the standard and rather inefficient MEMS rotary bearing designs will considerably reduce the windmill's performance.

However, if the conversion efficiency is reduced to 20 percent, and later windmills are designed with more blade area (and perhaps more blades), in a 10 m/s (22 mph) airflow, a micro-windmill can deliver a significant fraction of a milliwatt. If we assume an application includes a thousand micro-windmills (and that the wind is constant), the windmill array would generate perhaps 5-10 W-hr (430-860 kJ) of mechanical power per day – about as much as is contained in a cell phone battery.

While the amount of power available may not be enormous, it is encouraging that it is sufficient for a host of operations, even if cell phone charging may be at the upper end of such applications. Consider bridge sensors. The sensor assemblies under development work at sub-microwatt levels most of the time, slowly accumulating data and awaiting a trigger signal to dump their information in a short burst of transmission. An average input of a few microwatts is all such a sensor requires. Many applications exist for energy harvesting, particularly in situations where revisiting sensors in place is impractical.

There is a potential problem that a suspicious observer would spot. Not the issue of how to convert this small amount of mechanical power into electricity; we'll look at that in a moment. The potential problem involves the boundary layer of air flowing by a surface.

A principle of modern aerodynamics is that when air flows past a surface, the air immediately next to the surface does not move relative to that surface; that is, there is a no-slip condition between the two substances. As we know that away from the surface the airflow remains largely unaffected (assuming the airflow is directed along the surface), there must be some characteristic distance away from the surface where the airflow attains its original value. This slowed layer is called the boundary layer, and the distance at which the airflow is moving relative to the surface at 99 percent of its full velocity is called the boundary layer thickness.

Here's the potential problem: if the micro-windmill is small compared to the boundary layer thickness, the air flow will be dramatically slowed. As the mechanical power of the windmill varies as the cube of the airflow speed, windmills buried in the boundary layer would be emasculated.

Fortunately, all works out well for the micro-windmills. At reasonable wind speeds, the boundary layer thickness likely to be encountered is smaller than a millimeter, or about one-third the total height of the windmill (I suspect that Chiao and Rao had done this calculation before making the windmill!).

The remaining engineering challenge is to convert a fraction of a milliwatt of mechanical energy efficiently into electrical energy. Not surprisingly, this won't be done by making a rotary electromagnetic generator half a millimeter in diameter with direct drive to the windmill's rotor. On this size scale, electrostatic forces are, on average, far stronger than are electromagnetic forces. Nor will a thousand windmills be coupled together using gears and transmissions; the mechanisms are simply not sufficiently efficient for such tiny devices.

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The most likely electric generator would be an electrostatic generator in which the windmill itself is the generator. If the rotor is electrically isolated from the tower, the two form a capacitor whose value changes by a factor of (very roughly) 100 as the blades spin. If the capacitor is charged to one volt when one of the blades is over the tower (maximum capacitance), after which the charge on the windmill is isolated, the stored electrostatic energy will become 100 times larger when the rotor is turned 60 degrees by the wind to an inverted Y orientation. This extra energy comes from the torque of the rotor turning the rotor by 60 degrees.

At this point, the capacitor is discharged into a storage supercapacitor or battery, and the generator is ready for the next cycle. With a coating of a high-k dielectric on the tower, perhaps 10 microwatts of electric power will be generated by a single windmill, depending on wind velocity. Note that my estimate is based on a crude model; better designs will increase the conversion efficiency considerably.

In addition to the unusual development of the micro-windmill, Chiao's lab has produced a range of MEMS devices and components that should help the development of medical micro-robotics. UT-Arlington has entered into a collaborative agreement with WinMEMS Technology of Taiwan for commercial development of these MEMS innovations.

“The company was quite surprised with the micro-windmill idea when we showed the demo video of working devices,” Rao said. “It was something completely out of the blue for them and their investors.” For us as well.

Source: University of Texas at Arlington

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World's smallest windmills to power cell phones (2024)

FAQs

World's smallest windmills to power cell phones? ›

They have developed a MEMS-based nickel alloy windmill so small that 10 could be mounted on a single grain of rice. Aimed at very- small-scale energy harvesting applications, these windmills could recharge batteries for smartphones, and directly power ultra-low-power electronic devices.

What is the smallest wind turbine in the world? ›

The micro-windmills (technically called horizontal axis wind turbines) have a three-bladed rotor 1.8 mm in diameter mounted on a tower about 2 mm tall. The mount is a friction hub, but this probably becomes an air bearing when the rotor is spinning. The thickness of the windmills is about 100 microns.

How much power can a small wind turbine generate? ›

Small wind turbines used in residential applications typically range in size from 400 watts to 20 kilowatts, depending on the amount of electricity you want to generate. A typical home uses approximately 10,649 kilowatt-hours of electricity per year (about 877 kilowatt-hours per month).

How much does a small windmill cost? ›

Cost of small wind turbines

Most homeowners using a wind turbine as their primary source of electricity install between 5 to 15 kW of wind power capacity, meaning they can expect to pay between $15,000 and $75,000 for their small wind turbine project. These numbers do not include any federal or state incentives.

Can a small wind turbine charge a battery? ›

Many small wind turbine generators ( 10 k W or less) consist of a variable speed rotor driving a permanent magnet synchronous generator (alternator). One application of such wind turbines is battery charging, in which the generator is connected through a rectifier to a battery bank.

What is one disadvantage of using a wind generator to charge a battery? ›

However, wind chargers also have the disadvantages of being variable, noisy, inefficient, and unsafe. They can produce fluctuating and unreliable electricity, depending on the wind speed and direction.

Are small wind turbines worth it? ›

If you have enough wind resource in your area and the situation is right, small wind electric systems are one of the most cost-effective home-based renewable energy systems -- with zero emissions and pollution. Small wind electric systems can: Lower your electricity bills by 50%–90%

What is the cut out speed of a small wind turbine? ›

DATA SHEET
GENERATORTypePermanent Magnet
ROTORPitch/YawUpwind passive system with steering rudder
WINDCut-In Speed2 m/s
Rated Wind Speed11 m/s
Cut-Out Speed60 m/s
17 more rows
Mar 1, 2024

How long do small wind turbines last? ›

Commercially available wind turbines range between 5 kW for small residential turbines and 5 MW for large scale utilities. Wind turbines are 20% to 40% efficient at converting wind into energy. The typical life span of a wind turbine is 20 years, with routine maintenance required every six months.

Can one windmill power a house? ›

To put it another way, the average wind turbine that came online in 2020 generates enough electricity in just 46 minutes to power an average U.S. home for one month.

Can I put a small wind turbine in my backyard? ›

Wind turbines take up more space than solar panels, and they aren't as suitable for as many properties. For starters, wind turbines work best for homeowners who have at least an acre of property. The more open space you have between buildings and trees, the better.

Can a small wind turbine power a house? ›

A 1.5-kW wind turbine will meet the needs of a home requiring 300 kWh per month in a location with a 14 MPH (6.26 meters per second) annual average wind speed. The manufacturer, dealer, or installer can provide you with the expected annual energy output of the turbine as a function of annual average wind speed.

Can anyone buy a windmill? ›

Onsite Power

There are wind turbines designed for everyone from residential homeowners to utilities, and from private to corporate use. Small wind turbines can be bought with cash, and commercial-scale projects can be financed.

How much is the cheapest windmill? ›

  • 3 Kw 5 Blade Wind Turbine. ₹ 1,50,000/Unit. Blade Length: 1650 MM. ...
  • 1.5 kw windmill Turbine. ₹ 1,65,000/Piece.

How much money does a wind turbine make per day? ›

In general, an average-sized wind turbine producing 1 MW, or a megawatt, could generate approximately $480 per day. There are also other factors that could affect your wind turbine income, for instance, the cost of maintenance or investing in turbines with larger capacities.

Can a wind turbine charge a car? ›

To enable this, the most renewable source of energy is being utilized which is Wind Energy. To harness this wind energy, the Vertical Axis Wind Turbine (VAWT) is used. The VAWT will be placed inside the front grille of the vehicle where there will be air flow, which will propel the turbine, and thus power is generated.

What can you power with a wind turbine? ›

Wind turbines can turn the power of wind into the electricity we all use to power our homes and businesses. They can be stand-alone, supplying just one or a very small number of homes or businesses, or they can be clustered to form part of a wind farm.

Can a wind turbine power my home? ›

The typical American household consumes somewhere between 877-911 kilowatt-hours (kWh) of electricity per month. A single wind turbine rated between 5 to 15 kilowatts (kW) can fulfill this need, provided you have the necessary wind speed in your area. Use a wind map to check annual average wind speeds in your area.

Can you connect a wind turbine to a battery? ›

Connecting the right batteries to your wind turbine is crucial for maximizing its potential. In this comprehensive guide, we'll explore the key factors that influence the choice of batteries for small wind turbines, helping you make informed decisions for a sustainable and reliable energy system.

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