Hierarchical Porous Cellulosic Triboelectric Materials for Extreme Environmental Conditions.
Jiamin ZhaoWanglin ZhangTao LiuYanhua LiuYing QinJilong MoChenchen CaiSong ZhangShuangxi NiePublished in: Small methods (2022)
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 cm 2 , 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.