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Expanding the portfolio of tribo-positive materials: Aniline formaldehyde condensates for high charge density triboelectric nanogenerators
Journal article   Open access   Peer reviewed

Expanding the portfolio of tribo-positive materials: Aniline formaldehyde condensates for high charge density triboelectric nanogenerators

Pengfei Zhao, Navneet Soin, Amit Kumar, Lin Shi, Shaoliang Guan, Christos Tsonos, Zidong Yu, Sekhar Chandra Ray, James A. McLaughlin, Zhigang Zhu, …
Nano energy, Vol.67, p.104291
14/11/2019

Abstract

Chemistry Chemistry, Physical Materials Science, Multidisciplinary Nanoscience & Nanotechnology Physics, Applied Science & Technology Science & Technology - Other Topics Materials Science Physical Sciences Physics Technology
The rapid uptake of energy harvesting triboelectric nanogenerators (TENGs) for self-powered electronics requires the development of high-performance tribo-materials capable of providing large power outputs. This work reports on the synthesis and use of aniline formaldehyde resin (AFR) for energy-harvesting applications. The facile, acidic-medium reaction between aniline and formaldehyde produces the aniline-formaldehyde condensate, which upon an in-vacuo high temperature curing step provides smooth AFR films with abundant nitrogen and oxygen surface functional groups which can acquire a tribo-positive charge and thus endow AFR with a significantly higher positive tribo-polarity than the existing state-of-art polyamide-6 (PA6). A TENG comprising of optimized thin-layered AFR against a polytetrafluomethylene (PTFE) film produced a peak-to-peak voltage of up to similar to 1000 V, a current density of similar to 65 mA m(-2), a transferred charge density of similar to 200 mu C m(-2) and an instantaneous power output (energy pulse) of similar to 11 W m(-2) (28.1 mu J cycle(-1)), respectively. The suitability of AFR was further supported through the Kelvin probe force microscopy (KPFM) measurements, which reveal a significantly higher average surface potential value of 1.147 V for AFR as compared to 0.87 V for PA6 and a step-by-step increase of the surface potential with the increase of energy generation cycles. The work not only proposes a novel and scalable mouldable AFR synthesis process but also expands with excellent prospects, the current portfolio of tribo-positive materials for triboelectric energy harvesting applications.
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