this post was submitted on 28 Dec 2025
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I can't see this being useful; the amount of energy generated is just so far below what's practical to use. An equivalent size of solar panels would be cheaper and provide orders of magnitude more energy even when it's cloudy.
It's an interesting idea though, and cool that they were able to harvest any power at all.
I didn't bother to read the paper, but the article says the system produced "10s of nanoamps at 10s of microvolts". I'll just assume each of those values are "100", since that's the highest value you could describe as "10s" of something.
That works out to 0.01 nanowatts. For comparison the tiny solar panel on a solar powered calculator might produce 0.0075 watts, or 750 million times that amount of power.
In reality, since wattage is a multiple of volts and amps, lowering both of those figures from my highball estimate would massively decrease the wattage. The solar calculator probably produces billions of times more power than this 1 foot long cylinder.
So, i think its neat that they were able to measure an effect, but the article really should not even be mentioning power generation.
This.
That thing is at best a sensor, certainly not a power generation device.
The antenna in my phone likely "harvests" orders of magnitude more electricity when receiving signal.
Thermal seems like a better idea than this.
Still, i guess it's good to know. But with our luck, billionaires will find a way to make the earth stop spinning.
Anything is a better idea than this. An unpowered LED in a regular room will generate more electricity from light shining at it. An unpowered speaker in a normal environment generates more electricity from the sound waves that fall on it. A phone's antenna will harvest more energy from the signal it receives.
All of these options are horrendously bad and inefficient ways to generate electricity, and still all of them are orders of magnitude more effective than that thing.