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Division of Energy & Environmental Technology
1. Journal Articles
Deacetylation-controlled chitin derivative imbedded WPU nanocomposite for highly powered and robust triboelectric nanogenerator
Park, Seungyoung
;
Kim, Kyeong Nam
;
Kim, Ju Min
;
Song, Wooseok
;
Myung, Sung
;
Lee, Sun Sook
;
An, Ki-Seok
Division of Energy & Environmental Technology
1. Journal Articles
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Title
Deacetylation-controlled chitin derivative imbedded WPU nanocomposite for highly powered and robust triboelectric nanogenerator
Issued Date
2023-10
Citation
Park, Seungyoung. (2023-10). Deacetylation-controlled chitin derivative imbedded WPU nanocomposite for highly powered and robust triboelectric nanogenerator. Composites Part B: Engineering, 265. doi: 10.1016/j.compositesb.2023.110948
Type
Article
Author Keywords
Triboelectric nanogenerator
;
Polyurethane
;
Chitin
;
Deacetylation
;
Positive triboelectric material
;
Electron-donating polymer
Keywords
PERFORMANCE
;
CHITOSAN
ISSN
1359-8368
Abstract
For effective triboelectric nanogenerator, it remains a major challenge to improve the intrinsic electron-donating properties of positive materials. We report a positive triboelectric nanocomposite material based on chitin, a biopolymer, embedded in a waterborne polyurethane matrix to improve the output performance, sustainability, and robustness of triboelectric nanogenerators (TENGs). This nanocomposite can increase the output performance via electron donating control through the deacetylation of chitin nanofibers. For the deacetylation of chitin, the exposed amine group can be an attractive electron donor combined with polyurethane, resulting in a higher output characteristic (210 V and 3.2 μA/cm2), as confirmed by Kelvin probe force microscopy measurements. Moreover, this nanocomposite film showed good sustainability (V/V0 = 85%) in a humid environment (85 RH%) owing to its hydrogen bonding with water molecules. The hybridized film exhibited excellent robustness (100,000 cycles of bending test, long-term stability test over 10,000 s) in two types of harsh mechanical environments. This flexible, robust TENG with a nanocomposite film can serve as a self-powered motion sensor for monitoring various human motions, such as contact pressure and sliding speed. Combined with a homemade sodium-ion potentiometric sensor, stable operation of the dehydration monitoring system was successfully demonstrated under sweating conditions. © 2023 The Authors
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11750/47529
DOI
10.1016/j.compositesb.2023.110948
Publisher
Elsevier
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001069478600001.pdf
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Kim, Kyeong Nam
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