What is being debunked, the news or the article?
The article says explicitly that their invention can be useful for places where there's no electricity whatsoever and where the presence of battery banks would be impractical. Whether those places exist is a matter of debate, of course, but where is the bunk?
Did you even watch the video?
I spent maybe a third of it showing all the hyped up media reports.
And then I showed some delusional claims in the paper itself.
As for the "where the presence of battery banks would be impractical", use super capacitors or some other form of storage to store real meaningful amounts of power during the day. Not 50 bloody mW.
Seriously, adding huge amounts of heatsinking and TEG and associated circuitry which ALSO require storage itself in the form of capacitors, to get the equivlent of a single 18650 cell of energy per day is so far from being practical it's a joke.
If it was just the paper on it's own without any delusion claims or replacing battery storage or other stuff and simply presenting the research and then no meadia hype, fine. But that's not what happened, so it gets busted.
And it's busted in the same way that solar roadways, batterieser, fontus etc etc are busted. All of them "worked" and could have a small niche application.
Did this one have to raise a million bucks on Kickstarter to be worthy of being busted?