logo
ResearchBunny Logo
Neuromorphic van der Waals crystals for substantial energy generation

Engineering and Technology

Neuromorphic van der Waals crystals for substantial energy generation

S. Kim, S. Choi, et al.

Discover an innovative approach to energy harvesting in nanofluidics through the work of Sungsoon Kim, Sangjin Choi, Hae Gon Lee, Dana Jin, Gwangmook Kim, Taehoon Kim, Joon Sang Lee, and Wooyoung Shim. This research presents a neuro-inspired method leveraging confined van der Waals crystals to enhance ion diffusion flux, achieving remarkable ion selectivity and efficient power generation.

00:00
00:00
~3 min • Beginner • English
Abstract
Controlling ion transport in nanofluidics is fundamental to water purification, bio-sensing, energy storage, energy conversion, and numerous other applications. For any of these, it is essential to design nanofluidic channels that are stable in the liquid phase and enable specific ions to pass. A human neuron is one such system, where electrical signals are transmitted by cation transport for high-speed communication related to neuromorphic computing. Here, we present a concept of neuro-inspired energy harvesting that uses confined van der Waals crystal and demonstrate a method to maximise the ion diffusion flux to generate an electromotive force. The confined nanochannel is robust in liquids as in neuron cells, enabling steady-state ion diffusion for hundred of hours and exhibiting ion selectivity of 95.8%, energy conversion efficiency of 41.4%, and power density of 5.26 W/m². This fundamental understanding and rational design strategy can enable previously unrealisable applications of passive-type large-scale power generation.
Publisher
Nature Communications
Published On
Jan 04, 2021
Authors
Sungsoon Kim, Sangjin Choi, Hae Gon Lee, Dana Jin, Gwangmook Kim, Taehoon Kim, Joon Sang Lee, Wooyoung Shim
Tags
ion transport
nanofluidics
energy harvesting
van der Waals crystals
ion selectivity
electromotive force
power generation
Listen, Learn & Level Up
Over 10,000 hours of research content in 25+ fields, available in 12+ languages.
No more digging through PDFs, just hit play and absorb the world's latest research in your language, on your time.
listen to research audio papers with researchbunny