| Literature DB >> 29707070 |
Chikako Sano1, Hiroyuki Mitsuya2, Shimpei Ono3, Kazumoto Miwa3, Hiroshi Toshiyoshi1, Hiroyuki Fujita1.
Abstract
A novel triboelectric energy harvester has been developed using an ionic liquid polymer with cations fixed at the surface. In this report, the fabrication of the device and the characterization of its energy harvesting performance are detailed. An electrical double layer was induced in the ionic liquid polymer precursor to attract the cations to the surface where they are immobilized using a UV-based crosslinking reaction. The finalized polymer is capable of generating an electrical current when contacted by a metal electrode. Using this property, energy harvesting experiments were conducted by cyclically contacting a gold-surface electrode with the charge fixed surface of the polymer. Control experiments verified the effect of immobilizing the cations at the surface. By synthesizing a polymer with the optimal composition ratio of ionic liquid to macromonomer, an output of 77 nW/cm2 was obtained with a load resistance of 1 MΩ at 1 Hz. This tuneable power supply with a μA level current output may contribute to Internet of Things networks requiring numerous sensor nodes at remote places in the environment.Entities:
Keywords: 206 Energy conversion / transport / storage / recovery; 50 Energy Materials; Triboelectric energy harvesting; electrical double layer; ionic liquid; triboelectric nanogenerator
Year: 2018 PMID: 29707070 PMCID: PMC5917432 DOI: 10.1080/14686996.2018.1448200
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Technol Adv Mater ISSN: 1468-6996 Impact factor: 8.090
Figure 1.(a) Schematic of fabrication process of surface-charge-fixed polymer. (b) Schematic of internal structure of fabricated polymer.
Figure 2.(a) Schematic of device structure and current measurement setup using a current input preamplifier. (b) Schematic of device structure and voltage measurement setup using an instrumentation amplifier.
Figure 3.(a) Typical short circuit (SC) current wave profile. The sinusoidal shaker displacement is also included in the left panel to show the phase relationship between the current and the mechanical excitation. (b) Typical open circuit (OC) voltage wave profile.
Figure 4.(a) Output current wave profiles with varying load resistance. (b) Average power plotted with respect to load resistance.
Figure 5.Electrical profiles plotted against varying concentrations of ionic liquid (IL) within the polymer matrix. (a) Peak current. (b) Transferred charge. (c) Static voltage.
Sample conditions for control experiments.
| Sample No. | Polarization (V) | IL ratio (%) |
|---|---|---|
| (a) | 0 | 0 |
| (b) | 0 | 10 |
| (c) | 3 | 10 |
Figure 6.Short circuit current wave profiles of samples shown in Table 1. The red arrow indicates the contact point and the blue arrow indicates the releasing point. (a) Ionic liquid free polymer. (b) Charge-fixed polymer without polarization. (c) Surface-charge-fixed polymer with polarization.
Figure 7.Electrical profiles plotted against varying frequencies of applied vibration. (a) Peak current. (b) Transferred charge. Charge amount is for one contact duration as shown in Figure 3(a). (c) Time constant.