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Harvesting energy from our living environment is an effective approach for sustainable, maintenance-free, and green power source for wireless, portable, or implanted electronics. Mechanical energy scavenging based on triboelectric effect has been proven to be simple, cost-effective, and robust. However, its output is still insufficient for sustainably driving electronic devices/systems. Here, we demonstrated a rationally designed arch-shaped triboelectric nanogenerator (TENG) by utilizing the contact electrification between a polymer thin film and a metal thin foil. The working mechanism of the TENG was studied by finite element simulation. The output voltage, current density, and energy volume density reached 230 V, 15.5 μA/cm(2), and 128 mW/cm(3), respectively, and an energy conversion efficiency as high as 10-39% has been demonstrated. The TENG was systematically studied and demonstrated as a sustainable power source that can not only drive instantaneous operation of light-emitting diodes (LEDs) but also charge a lithium ion battery as a regulated power module for powering a wireless sensor system and a commercial cell phone, which is the first demonstration of the nanogenerator for driving personal mobile electronics, opening the chapter of impacting general people's life by nanogenerators.
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Sihong Wang
Argonne National Laboratory
Long Lin
Xiamen University
Zhong Lin Wang
Georgia Institute of Technology
Nano Letters
Chinese Academy of Sciences
Georgia Institute of Technology
Beijing Institute of Nanoenergy and Nanosystems
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Wang et al. (Tue,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a01cc8dbd6301933f5cc073 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1021/nl303573d
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