TY - JOUR
T1 - Surface Self-Assembly of Functional Electroactive Nanofibers on Textile Yarns as a Facile Approach toward Super Flexible Energy Storage
AU - Tebyetekerwa, Mike
AU - Xu, Zhen
AU - Li, Weili
AU - Wang, Xingping
AU - Marriam, Ifra
AU - Peng, Shengjie
AU - Ramakrishna, Seeram
AU - Yang, Shengyuan
AU - Zhu, Meifang
PY - 2018/2
Y1 - 2018/2
N2 - Textile yarns undergo modifications for use in various smart applications such as energy storage, sensing, and others. For energy storage applications in yarn supercapacitors and batteries, one of the most commonly used yarn modification techniques is the coating of conductive active materials onto textile yarns. The coating process can be via vapor phase polymerization, dip coating, thin film coating using layer by layer assembly, atomic layer depositions, and electrochemical depositions. However, these methods are hectic, uncontrollable, and hardly scalable. Beyond these, they also give brittle coatings which tend to crack easily if coated yarns are incorporated into traditional textiles during use or even during postmanufacturing in weaving/knitting and sewing. Herein, a facile concept for the nanofibers coated on yarn via a modified electrospinning process is proposed to address the challenges. The method is capable of giving all-textile super flexible nanofiber coated yarns with excellent electrochemical performance, exceptional durability, and excellent flexibility, all courtesy of the electroactive and porous nature of the nanofibers coated around textile yarn current collector aiding faster ion diffusion. The method opens up a new scalable strategy to fabricate smart yarns with single nozzle productivity of up to 1.2 m h(-1).
AB - Textile yarns undergo modifications for use in various smart applications such as energy storage, sensing, and others. For energy storage applications in yarn supercapacitors and batteries, one of the most commonly used yarn modification techniques is the coating of conductive active materials onto textile yarns. The coating process can be via vapor phase polymerization, dip coating, thin film coating using layer by layer assembly, atomic layer depositions, and electrochemical depositions. However, these methods are hectic, uncontrollable, and hardly scalable. Beyond these, they also give brittle coatings which tend to crack easily if coated yarns are incorporated into traditional textiles during use or even during postmanufacturing in weaving/knitting and sewing. Herein, a facile concept for the nanofibers coated on yarn via a modified electrospinning process is proposed to address the challenges. The method is capable of giving all-textile super flexible nanofiber coated yarns with excellent electrochemical performance, exceptional durability, and excellent flexibility, all courtesy of the electroactive and porous nature of the nanofibers coated around textile yarn current collector aiding faster ion diffusion. The method opens up a new scalable strategy to fabricate smart yarns with single nozzle productivity of up to 1.2 m h(-1).
KW - Electrospinning
KW - Energy storage
KW - Flexible electrodes
KW - Wearable electronics
KW - Yarn supercapacitors
UR - https://www.webofscience.com/api/gateway?GWVersion=2&SrcApp=pure_starter&SrcAuth=WosAPI&KeyUT=WOS:000458705100023&DestLinkType=FullRecord&DestApp=WOS_CPL
U2 - 10.1021/acsaem.7b00057
DO - 10.1021/acsaem.7b00057
M3 - Article
SN - 2574-0962
VL - 1
SP - 377
EP - 386
JO - ACS Applied Energy Materials
JF - ACS Applied Energy Materials
IS - 2
ER -