| Literature DB >> 35802901 |
Jiamin Zhao1, Wanglin Zhang1, Tao Liu1, Yanhua Liu1, Ying Qin1, Jilong Mo1, Chenchen Cai1, Song Zhang1, Shuangxi Nie1.
Abstract
Synthetic polymer materials such as paraformaldehyde and polyamides are widely used in the field of energy engineering. However, they pose a challenge to environmental sustainability because they are derived from petrochemicals that are non-renewable and difficult to degrade in the natural environment. The development of high-performance natural alternatives is clearly emerging as a promising mitigation option. Inspired by natural bamboo, this research reports a "three-step" strategy for the large-scale production of triboelectric materials with special nanostructures from natural bamboo. Benefiting from the special hierarchical porous structure of the material, Bamboo/polyaniline triboelectric materials can reach short-circuit current of 2.9 µA and output power of 1.1 W m-2 at a working area of only 1 cm2 , which exceeds most wood fiber-based triboelectric materials. More importantly, it maintains 85% energy harvesting after an extreme environment of high temperature (200 °C), low temperature (-196 °C), combustion environment, and multiple thermal shocks (ΔT = 396 °C). This is unmatched by current synthetic polymer materials. This work provides new research ideas for the construction and application of biomass structural materials under extreme environmental conditions.Entities:
Keywords: cellulosic triboelectric materials; energy harvesting; extreme environmental condition; hierarchical porous materials; sensing; triboelectric nanogenerators
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35802901 DOI: 10.1002/smtd.202200664
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Small Methods ISSN: 2366-9608