Nanomaterials (Oct 2022)

Experimental Investigation of Reynolds Number and Spring Stiffness Effects on Vortex-Induced Vibration Driven Wind Energy Harvesting Triboelectric Nanogenerator

  • Qing Chang,
  • Zhenqiang Fu,
  • Shaojun Zhang,
  • Mingyu Wang,
  • Xinxiang Pan

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/nano12203595
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 20
p. 3595

Abstract

Read online

Vortex-induced vibration (VIV) is a process that wind energy converts to the mechanical energy of the bluff body. Enhancing VIV to harvest wind energy is a promising method to power wireless sensor nodes in the Internet of Things. In this work, a VIV-driven square cylinder triboelectric nanogenerator (SC-TENG) is proposed to harvest broadband wind energy. The vibration characteristic and output performance are studied experimentally to investigate the effect of the natural frequency by using five different springs in a wide range of stiffnesses (27 N/mK90 N/m). The square cylinder is limited to transverse oscillation and experiments were conducted in the Reynolds regime (3.93×103–3.25×104). The results demonstrate the strong dependency of VIV on natural frequency and lock-in observed in a broad range of spring stiffness. Moreover, the amplitude ratio and range of lock-in region increase by decreasing spring stiffness. On the other hand, the SC-TENG with higher spring stiffness can result in higher output under high wind velocities. These observations suggest employing an adjustable natural frequency system to have optimum energy harvesting in VIV-based SC-TENG in an expanded range of operations.

Keywords