1 research outputs found
Fluorinated Nanocellulose-Reinforced All-Organic Flexible Ferroelectric Nanocomposites for Energy Generation
We report here enhanced ferroelectric
crystal formation and energy
generation properties of polyvinylidene fluoride (PVDF) in the presence
of surface-modified crystalline nanocellulose. Incorporation of only
2–5 wt % fluorinated nanocellulose (FNC) in PVDF has been found
to significantly induce polar β/γ-phase crystallization
as compared to the addition of unmodified nanocellulose (carboxylated
nanocellulose). A device made up of electrically poled PVDF/FNC composite
films yielded 2 orders of magnitude higher voltage output than neat
PVDF in vibrational energy harvesting. This remarkable increase in
energy generation properties of PVDF at such a low loading of an organic
natural biopolymer could be attributed to the tailored surface chemistry
of nanocellulose, facilitating strong interfacial interactions between
PVDF and FNC. Interestingly, energy harvesting devices fabricated
from PVDF/FNC nanocomposites charged a 4.7 μF capacitor at significantly
faster rate and the accumulated voltage on capacitor was 3.8 times
greater than neat PVDF. The fact that PVDF/FNC nanocomposites still
retain a strain at break of 10–15% and can charge a capacitor
in few seconds suggests potential use of these nanocomposites as flexible
energy harvesting materials at large strain conditions