"We wear fabric every day," said Li, a professor of mechanical
engineering at USC. "One day our cotton T-shirts could have more
functions; for example, a flexible energy storage device that could
charge your cell phone or your iPad."
Li is helping make the
vision a reality. He and post-doctoral associate Lihong Bao have just
reported in the journal Advanced Materials how to turn the material in a
cotton T-shirt into a source of electrical power.
Starting with a T-shirt from a local discount store, carbon prepregLi's
team soaked it in a solution of fluoride, dried it and baked it at high
temperature. They excluded oxygen in the oven to prevent the material
from charring or simply combusting.
The surfaces of the resulting
fibers in the fabric were shown by infrared spectroscopy to have been
converted from cellulose to activated carbon. Yet the material retained
flexibility; it could be folded without breaking.
"We will soon
see roll-up cell phones and laptop computers on the market," Li said.
"But a flexible energy storage device is needed to make this possible."
The
once-cotton T-shirt proved to be a repository for electricity. By using
small swatches of the fabric as an electrode, the researchers showed
that the flexible material, which Li's team terms activated carbon
textile, acts as a capacitor. Capacitors are components of nearly every
electronic device on the market, and they have the ability to store
electrical charge.
Moreover, prepregLi
reports that activated carbon textile acts like double-layer
capacitors, which are also called a supercapacitors because they can
have particularly high energy storage densities.
But Li and Bao
took the material even further than that. They then coated the
individual fibers in the activated carbon textile with "nanoflowers" of
manganese oxide. Just a nanometer thick, this layer of manganese oxide
greatly enhanced the electrode performance of the fabric. "This created a
stable, high-performing supercapacitor," said Li.
This hybrid
fabric, in which the activated carbon textile fibers are coated with
nanostructured manganese oxide, improved the energy storage capability
beyond the activated carbon textile alone. The hybrid supercapacitors
were resilient: even after thousands of charge-discharge cycles,
performance didn't diminish more than 5 percent.
"By stacking these supercapacitors up,carbon sheet we should be able to charge portable electronic devices such as cell phones," Li said.
Li
is particularly pleased to have improved on the means by which
activated carbon fibers are usually obtained. "Previous methods used oil
or environmentally unfriendly chemicals as starting materials,"carbon cloth he said. "Those processes are complicated and produce harmful side products. Our method is a very inexpensive, green process."
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