José Miguel Blancas Floresa,
María Guadalupe Pérez Garcíaa,
Gabriel González Contrerasb,
Alberto Coronado Mendozaa and
Victor Hugo Romero Arellano*a
aCentro Universitario de Tonalá, División de Ingenierías e Innovación Tecnológica, Universidad de Guadalajara, Tonalá, Jal. 45425, Mexico. E-mail: vicromare@gmail.com
bCátedras CONACYT, Coordinación para la Innovación y la Aplicación de la Ciencia y la Tecnología, Universidad Autónoma de San Luis Potosí, San Luis Potosí, 78000, Mexico
First published on 23rd December 2020
Polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) nanocomposite (NC) macroporous films were prepared by a Pickering high internal phase emulsion (HIPE) templating technique and used as effective dielectrics for enhancing the performance of triboelectric-nanogenerators (TENGs). HIPEs were formulated using commercial PDMS and water as the continuous and dispersed phase, respectively. The formation and solidification of PDMS-based HIPEs were possible through stabilization with silver-nanoparticles (Ag-Nps) and surfactant (Span 20) mixtures. The resulting PDMS-NC-polyHIPE films presented an interconnected 3D macroporous structure with Ag-Nps on their porous surface. The addition of different amounts of Ag-Nps (0, 4, 20, 28, 36 wt%) in HIPE formulations allowed modification of the pore size, total pore volume and dielectric properties of the tribo-materials. Results revealed that both the porosity and dielectric properties of these materials play an important role in enhancing the output performance of TENGs. Thus, the best TENG based on the PDMS-NC-polyHIPE film was achieved with 20 wt% of Ag-Nps, with voltage, current and power values of 4.88 V, 0.433 μA and 2.1 μW, respectively, which gives over 3.28-fold power enhancement compared with the reference TENG (based on a PDMS film without porosity or Ag-Nps). Therefore, the preparation of tribo-materials through a Pickering HIPE templating technique provides a novel, effective and easy way for the improvement of the TENG's performance.
Polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) is commonly used as tribo-material due to its interesting properties such as electronegativity, flexibility, transparency and ease of large scale production.12,14–16 Recently, special interest has been given to the fabrication of porous PDMS films (also known as sponges) because their porous structure provides better mechanical properties (e.g. flexibility and compressibility), which makes them attractive for the development of flexible electronic devices.17–20 In order to improve the performance of these porous structures in TENG devices, it is common to create nanocomposite (NC) films by the incorporation of nanoparticles (Nps) such as Ag, Au, TiO2, SiO2, or BaTiO3 as fillers in PDMS arrays, with which micro-capacitor structures are created, obtaining improvements in electrical properties, thus achieving a more efficient output-power.21–23 Currently, there are several methods and strategies for the development of PDMS NC sponges,24 however only some of them have been evaluated in TENGs. For instance, the direct template method has been widely used due to its simplicity as it does not require additional equipment for its preparation.15,19–23,25–29
The typical procedure of the direct template method consists to prepare a mixture between the elastomer, the filler dielectric nanoparticles and some kind of particle that will be later dissolved to generate the porous structure, Xia, et al.23 used sugar particles of different sizes and at different concentrations and silver nanoparticles (Ag-Nps) as fillers. After the elimination of sugar particles, porous structures with embedded Ag-Nps were obtained and used as tribo-materials of TENGs. These devices achieved an output power as high as 6 W m−2 due to an increase in current output 4 times greater than TENGs based on solid PDMS films. In other work, Chen et al.21 used NaCl particles to create the porous structure and made a comparison between different filler dielectric Nps (SiO2, TiO2, BaTiO3 and SrTiO3). The obtained tribo-materials reached an output power of 6.47 W m−2 equivalent to 5 times the power improvement compared to the reference TENG. In both reports, the pore size was limited to the size of the dissolved particles, and the interconnection of the pores is not favored due to the relative separation between the incorporated particles. In addition, long washing processes were required to dissolve the particles to obtain the porous structure.
On the other hand, Chun et al.22 added water during the PDMS curing process, which was later evaporated to obtain materials with different porous structures depending on the amount of water incorporated to the PDMS elastomer. Then, the porous structure was impregnated with gold nanoparticles (Au-Nps). The resulting NC porous tribo-materials achieved an output-power of 13 mW, 5-fold power enhancement compared with a flat film-based TENG, which was, attributed to the density of charges created by the contact between Au-Nps and PDMS inside the pores. However, the impregnation process involves long times, and requires good pore interconnection, to ensure a uniform distribution of Au-Nps.
In all the previous reports mentioned, the effects achieved are directly related to the concentration and nature of the incorporated Nps, as well as the interconnection, size and volume of pores. Thus, the implementation of alternative techniques that allows a better control of porous structure and surface functionalization with Nps in the development of NC porous tribo-materials is of great interest nowadays.
In this context, emulsion templating is a versatile technique widely employed to prepare highly porous and well-defined porous materials, whereby the droplets of the internal (or dispersed) phase are used to create the porous structure by curing or polymerization of the continuous phase.30 Regarding high internal phase emulsions (HIPEs), the internal volume fraction accounts for more than 74%, which allows the formation of polyhedral drops in the range of micrometers that, upon solidification of the continuous phase and extraction of the internal one, result in interconnected 3D macroporous materials commonly known as polyHIPEs.30–32 The porous structure and thus the specific surface area of these materials is tailored by altering the type or concentration of surfactant, the internal to continuous phase volume ratio, and the cross-linked concentrations used in HIPEs formulation.33–36 In addition, the incorporation of particles can replace or reduce the amount of surfactant increasing the emulsion stability due to particles tendency to adsorb quasi-irreversibly to the oil–water interface, which avoid coalescence and Ostwald ripening.37–39 These emulsions are termed Pickering HIPEs. It has been reported that nanoparticles and surfactants synergistically used to stabilize the emulsion not only allow to control pore size, pore openness and interconnectivity, but also provide a suitable method of surface porous functionalization of the resulting nanocomposite (NC) polyHIPEs.40–42
NC-polyHIPEs have found several applications where the control of the porous structure and the surface functionalization with nanoparticles is crucial, many of which involves support for chemical reactions,43 absorbents for water purification,41,44 tissue engineering,45–47 among others. Such control of the porous structure and the surface functionalization with nanoparticles have become also crucial to the development of tribo-materials for enhancing the TENGs performance.48 Draws attention that although the Pickering HIPE templating technique could provide several advantages in this matter, until now, there is no report of NC-polyHIPEs applied as tribo-materials.
In addition, there are few works reported about PDMS-based polyHIPEs, which could be attributed to viscosity-related processing challenges associated with commercially-available PDMS used as the continuous phase in HIPEs formulation. For instance, Kataruka et al.,49 produced Pickering HIPE templates (stabilized by silica nanoparticles and the Gransurf 2106 surfactant) via centrifugation of low internal phase emulsions (LIPEs, <30% by volume dispersed phase) to overcome the prohibitive barrier to HIPE formation when using a mechanically-superior, but highly viscous commercial PDMS kit. Open and closed-cell NC-polyHIPEs were obtained where the porous structure and interconnectivity depended on the centrifugation force and the emulsifier. In a different approach, Kovalenko et al.,50 showed that using surfactants with different solubility in the high viscous continuous phase (PDMS) and mixing them by a mechanical stirring, it was possible to tune the emulsions droplets, which leaded to modify the porous structure of the resulting materials. Furthermore, it was observed that the mechanical and acoustic properties of the porous materials were improved by tailoring the porous structure.
In this work, PDMS-NC-porous films were synthesized through the Pickering HIPE templating technique and used as tribo-materials of vertical-contact-mode TENG system. The pore size, total pore volume and dielectric properties of these materials were easily modified by the addition of different amounts of Ag-Nps (0, 4, 20, 28 and 36 wt%) and the surfactant Span 20 (0 and 1 wt%) in HIPEs formulation. For comparative purposes, flat PDMS-NC films with different amounts of Ag-Nps (0 and 20 wt%) were also used as tribo-materials of TENGs. The effect of the pore size, total pore volume and the amount of Ag-Nps on the output response of TENG was systematically studied. Finally, the Pickering HIPE templating technique is presented as a novel strategy to control the porous structure as well as the porous surface functionalization with Ag-Nps as effective dielectrics of triboelectric PDMS-NC porous materials for enhancing TENGs' performance.
The morphology of Ag-Nps was observed by transmission electron microscopy (TEM, JEM ARM 200 CF). The average size and size distribution were obtained by dynamic light scattering (DLS, Malvern Zetasizer Nano ZS90).
The total pore volume (VT) was estimated as 1/ρb − 1/ρw where ρb is the polyHIPE film density and ρw is the wall density of pores that is the density of the NC polymer (curing PDMS/Ag-Nps nanocomposite). ρw corresponded to the density of the flat PDMS film containing the same amount of Ag-Nps than the respective polyHIPE film. ρb and ρw were calculated by measuring the volume and weight of the polyHIPE and flat PDMS films, respectively.
X-ray diffraction (XRD) patterns of polyHIPE films were collected by using an Empyrean diffractometer (Cu Kα radiation, 0.02° step size and 30 s counting time). In addition, polyHIPEs films were analysed by energy dispersive X-ray spectroscopy (EDS) using a Bruker AXS. To verify the presence of Ag-Nps onto the porous surface of the films, EDS analysis was performed at different points of the samples.
The morphology of HIPEs consisted of close-packed polyhedral and polydisperse droplets separated by a thin film of the continuous phase (PDMS), as was observed by optical microscopy (Fig. 1a shows a representative optical micrograph of HIPE with 36 wt% of Ag-Nps). In addition, the droplet size decreased as the amount of Ag-Nps increased and the amount of the surfactant Span 20 remained constant (Fig. 2). An increase in droplet size has been attributed to coalescence between droplets, which could be an indicative of low emulsion stability.41,42 The results suggest that Ag-Nps form an effective adsorption barrier at the W/O interface that prevents coalescence. Thus, a more compact droplet conformation can be observed when the amount of Ag-Nps increased. Furthermore, the effective barrier at the interface is not formed only with Ag-Nps, but a low amount of the surfactant Span 20 (1 wt%) was required to obtain the stable emulsions. The dual emulsifiers synergism between the surfactant and nanoparticles leads to an enhanced emulsion stability, as was reported in previous works.42,52–54
Fig. 2 Droplet diameter (Dd, black bars), pore diameter (Dp, blue bars) and total pore volume (VT, red bars) of polyHIPEs films as a function of Ag-Nps amount. |
Ag-Nps used in HIPEs formulation were prepared by a reduction method51 and chosen for this study mainly because their dielectric properties (advantageous for the development of the tribo-material).23,55 Fig. S2,† shows a TEM micrograph and the inset shows the size distribution obtained by DLS analysis of the synthesized Ag-Nps. Results revealed that Ag-Nps were quasi spherical (Fig. S2†) and with an average size of 11.8 ± 0.70 nm.
According with previous works,43,56 the total pore volume (VT) can be estimated as 1/ρb − 1/ρw where ρb is the polyHIPE film density and ρw is the wall density of pores that is the density of the NC polymer (curing PDMS/Ag-Nps nanocomposite). In this case, ρw values can be corresponded to the density of flat PDMS films containing the same amount of Ag-Nps than polyHIPE films. Therefore, ρw and ρb were estimated by measuring the volume and weight of the polyHIPE and flat PDMS films with the different amounts of Ag-Nps, as was explained in the experimental section. Flat PDMS films with 0, 4, 20, 28 and 36 wt% of Ag-Nps presented ρw values of 0.96, 1.14, 1.44, 1.46, and 1.47 g cm−3, respectively. In the case of porous PDMS films, polyHIPE@0, polyHIPE@4, polyHIPE@20, polyHIPE@28 and polyHIPE@36 presented ρb values of 0.85, 0.86, 0.84, 0.75 and 0.73 g cm−3, respectively. ρb and ρw were used to estimate VT values of all polyHIPEs. Fig. 2 shows that VT increased as Dp decreased; this behaviour is similar to those reported in previous works.36,56 It is evident that Dp and VT can be modified by the addition of different amounts of Ag-Nps in HIPEs formulation.
X-ray diffraction (XRD) analysis confirmed the presence of Ag-Nps in polyHIPEs films (Fig. 3a shows the XRD pattern of polyHIPE@36). The diffraction peaks were located at 38.11°, 44.33°, 64.60° and 77.47° that can be indexed to (111), (200), (220) and (311) planes, respectively, corresponding to the face centered cubic phase of silver (JCPDS file no. 04-0783). Furthermore, EDS spectra and elemental mapping exposed the presence of the Ag-Nps onto the porous surface of the polyHIPE films, (Fig. 3b and c are shown as representative results).
(1) |
Sample | d [mm] | C [pF] | εr | tanδ × 10−3 |
---|---|---|---|---|
PolyHIPE@0 | 0.47 | 22.60 ± 0.40 | 3.00 ± 0.02 | 3.19 |
PolyHIPE@4 | 0.47 | 24.15 ± 0.10 | 3.21 ± 0.10 | 3.19 |
PolyHIPE@20 | 0.46 | 24.64 ± 0.20 | 3.20 ± 0.01 | 3.26 |
PolyHIPE@28 | 0.46 | 23.45 ± 1.05 | 3.05 ± 0.04 | 3.26 |
PolyHIPE@36 | 0.45 | 23.90 ± 0.50 | 3.04 ± 0.01 | 3.34 |
F-PDMS@0 | 0.47 | 22.90 ± 0.40 | 3.04 ± 0.01 | 3.19 |
F-PDMS@20 | 0.47 | 21.40 ± 0.50 | 2.84 ± 0.02 | 3.19 |
Initially, both the capacitance and relative permittivity of the polyHIPE@4 film show an increase with respect to the reference film (polyHIPE@0), then, when increasing the amount of silver (polyHIPE@20), the capacitance increases slightly, while the relative permittivity remains almost constant; later, when the Ag-Nps exceeds 20 wt%, both the relative permittivity and capacitance begin to decrease.
The same tendency discussed above was obtained in the curves of the open-circuit voltage and short-circuit current versus time for the different assembled TENGs, which are shown in Fig. 5a and b, respectively. The initial generated output short-circuit current and open-circuit voltage for the polyHIPE@0-TENG were 0.261 μA and 2.61 V, respectively, later these values increased with the rise of Ag-Nps, reaching a maximum of 0.433 μA and 4.88 V for current and voltage for the polyHIPE@20-TENG which represents a 66% and 87% increment, respectively, with respect to the reference polyHIPE@0-TENG. Finally, the output short-circuit current and open-circuit voltage of the TENGs decreased when Ag-Nps were greater than 20%.
The non-linear variation of the electrical properties has been reported by other authors as a consequence of different factors. For the systems studied in this work, the total pore volume (see Fig. 2) and dielectric loss increases with the concentration of Ag-Nps. Both parameters contribute to reduce the electrical properties, the effect of deterioration due to the presence of pores can be explained in terms of the effective permittivity, that consists of a combination of the relative permittivity values of the PDMS film and the permittivity of air εr = 1 present inside of the pores gap,21 while the dielectric loss represents a reduction of the charge storage.23 Likewise, another parameter that represents deterioration of the electrical properties is the saturation of Ag-Nps, which increases the leakage current, thus reducing the effect of triboelectrification as reported by Park et al.57
On the other hands, there are parameters that favor the electrical properties, one of them is the reduction of the thickness of the dielectric film, that was reduced with the amount of Ag-Nps, starting with an initial thickness of 0.47 mm for the sample without Ag-Nps (polyHIPE@0), and decreasing up to 0.45 mm for the maximum amount of Ag-Nps (polyHIPE@36). Similarly, a factor for the improvement of the electrical properties is the formation of capacitor structures due to the interaction between a metal and a dielectric (Ag-Nps and PDMS respectively), defined by Xia et al.,23 as variable micro capacitors (VMCs) in arrays of cellular structures formed in a porous network, in this way, when compression is applied to the film, the diameter of the pores will decrease, thus improving the capacitance.
As discussed above, porous structures can represent a deterioration in electrical properties due to the presence of air in the pore gap, however at the same time, a film with a porous structure presents a greater contact area, as well as better compressibility,21,22 in this way, the best balance between all of this effects was achieved for sample polyHIPE@20, and the decrease in electrical properties for samples polyHIPE@28 and polyHIPE@36, suggests that the effect of the formation of silver aggregates begins to predominate. It should be noted that for the same amount of Ag-Nps embedded in a porous film (polyHIPE@20) and a non-porous film (F-PDMS@20), a higher density of nanoparticles will be generated in the porous films,58 however it can be analyzed from Table 1, that the capacitance and dielectric constant values were lower for F-PDMS@20, (21.4 pF and εr = 2.84 respectively), this shows that the formation of nanoparticles aggregates becomes more sensitive in non-porous films, while at the same concentration, the dispersion of the nanoparticles in porous structures favors the effect of VMCs.
In order to analyze the effect of the porous structure without the influence of Ag-Nps, polyHIPE@0 and F-PDMS@0 films were compared. As expected, the dielectric constant and capacitance values were higher for the F-PDMS@0 film (εr = 3.04 and 22.9 pF respectively), while dielectric loss and thickness of the films remained constant. As already discussed, the porous film shows lower electrical properties, as a consequence of a decreased in the effective permittivity due to the air present inside the pores gap.21 However, it should be considered that these electrical properties were characterized with the films at rest, while the characterization of the performance of the TENGs devices is carried out under cyclical contact conditions (compression and relaxation). Under these considerations, in Table 2 it shows that the best performance between these two samples was obtained for polyHIPE@0-TENG, with an output current of 0.261 μA, and an output power of 0.68 μW. Therefore, the importance of a porous structured film is highlighted, because it has a greater contact area and reduces its thickness much better when subjected to compression,21,22 both of these parameters are crucial for the εrS/d ratio from eqn (1). However, we are aware that a broader study must take place in order to understand the contribution of every single parameter of the system.
Sample | Voltage [V] | Current [μA] | Power [μW] |
---|---|---|---|
PolyHIPE@0-TENG | 2.61 | 0.261 | 0.68 |
PolyHIPE@4-TENG | 3.53 | 0.359 | 1.27 |
PolyHIPE@20-TENG | 4.88 | 0.433 | 2.10 |
PolyHIPE@28-TENG | 4.34 | 0.377 | 1.64 |
PolyHIPE@36-TENG | 4.67 | 0.388 | 1.81 |
F-PDMS@0-TENG | 2.65 | 0.241 | 0.64 |
F-PDMS@20-TENG | 2.01 | 0.173 | 0.35 |
Thus, the best triboelectric properties were obtained for the polyHIPE@20-TENG configuration with an output power of 2.1 μW which is 6 and 3.28 times greater than the F-PDMS@20-TENG and F-PDMS@0-TENG respectively, which makes it viable for low consumption devices, such as power LEDs. A proof of concept is presented in the ESI (Fig. S4†). These gain obtained represents values equivalent to the percentages of improvement reported in similar works,21–23 which is an indication that the HIPEs technique is a competitive method with the possibility of creating capacitor structures with interconnected pores.
Footnote |
† Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available. See DOI: 10.1039/d0ra07934k |
This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry 2021 |