2 research outputs found
Rationalizing the Triboelectric Series of Polymers
Rationalizing the Triboelectric Series of Polymer
The Relationship between Static Charge and Shape
The amount of charge
of a material has always been regarded as
a property (or state) of materials and can be measured precisely and
specifically. This study describes for the first time a fundamental
physical–chemical phenomenon in which the amount of charge
of a material is actually a variableit depends on the shape
of the material. Materials are shown to have continuously variable
and reversible ranges of charge states by changing their shapes. The
phenomenon was general for different shapes, transformations, materials,
atmospheric conditions, and methods of charging. The change in charge
was probably due to a dynamic exchange of charge from the material
to the surrounding atmosphere as the shape changed via the reversible
ionization and deposition of air molecules. Similar changes in charge
were observed for self-actuating materials that changed their shapes
autonomously. This fundamental relationship between geometry and electrostatics
via chemistry is important for the broad range of applications related
to the charge of flexible materials
