High‐Performance Biomechanical Energy Harvester Enabled by Switching Interfacial Adhesion via Hydrogen Bonding and Phase Separation

Dramatic advances in wearable electronics have triggered tremendous demands for wearable power sources. To mitigate the impact of CO2 emission on the environment caused by energy consumption, biomechanical energy harvesting for self‐powered wearable electronics offers a promising solution. The outpu...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inAdvanced functional materials Vol. 32; no. 38
Main Authors Wang, Lingyun, Wang, Yu, Bo, Xiangkun, Wang, Haoyu, Yang, Su, Tao, Xiaoming, Zi, Yunlong, Yu, William W., Li, Wen Jung, Daoud, Walid A.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Hoboken Wiley Subscription Services, Inc 01.09.2022
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Summary:Dramatic advances in wearable electronics have triggered tremendous demands for wearable power sources. To mitigate the impact of CO2 emission on the environment caused by energy consumption, biomechanical energy harvesting for self‐powered wearable electronics offers a promising solution. The output power of devices largely relies on the surface charge density, where adhesion interfaces generate a higher amount than nonadhesion counterparts, yet unfavorable for wearable devices due to the large detachment force required. Thus, sustaining high surface charge density in an adhesion‐free interface represents a major challenge. Herein, by leveraging intermolecular interactions and solvent evaporation induced phase separation, a nonadhesion interface is successfully realized, minimizing the interfacial adhesion from 20 to 0 kPa. Importantly, benefiting from the induced nano/microscale topography upon phase separation, comparable surface charges are generated at the interface. Consequently, a high‐performance flexible biomechanical energy harvester featuring a record high peak power density of 20.5 W m‐2 Hz‐1 at low matching impedance of 1 MΩ is achieved under a low biomechanical input force of 5 N. The device can power small electronics by harvesting regular or intermittent biomechanical energy and illuminate light‐emitting diodes wired/wirelessly. This work provides a facile strategy for interfacial engineering toward efficient energy harvesting. A nonadhesion interface is realized by leveraging intermolecular interactions and phase separation. The resulting surface topography and chemistry switch interfacial adhesion from 20 to 0 kPa while sustaining the high surface charge density. The blend film‐based flexible power source shows a record high output of 520 V, 109 mA m–2 Hz–1, and 20.5 W m–2 Hz–1 via harvesting biomechanical energy.
ISSN:1616-301X
1616-3028
DOI:10.1002/adfm.202204304