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Thermally Driven Transport and Relaxation Switching Self‐Powered Electromagnetic Energy Conversion
Author(s) -
Cao Maosheng,
Wang Xixi,
Cao Wenqiang,
Fang Xiaoyong,
Wen Bo,
Yuan Jie
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
small
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.785
H-Index - 236
eISSN - 1613-6829
pISSN - 1613-6810
DOI - 10.1002/smll.201800987
Subject(s) - electromagnetic radiation , energy transformation , materials science , electricity , energy harvesting , energy storage , mechanical energy , graphene , renewable energy , optoelectronics , energy (signal processing) , electrical engineering , nanotechnology , physics , engineering , quantum mechanics , thermodynamics , power (physics) , optics
Electromagnetic energy radiation is becoming a “health‐killer” of living bodies, especially around industrial transformer substation and electricity pylon. Harvesting, converting, and storing waste energy for recycling are considered the ideal ways to control electromagnetic radiation. However, heat‐generation and temperature‐rising with performance degradation remain big problems. Herein, graphene‐silica xerogel is dissected hierarchically from functions to “genes,” thermally driven relaxation and charge transport, experimentally and theoretically, demonstrating a competitive synergy on energy conversion. A generic approach of “material genes sequencing” is proposed, tactfully transforming the negative effects of heat energy to superiority for switching self‐powered and self‐circulated electromagnetic devices, beneficial for waste energy harvesting, conversion, and storage. Graphene networks with “well‐sequencing genes” ( w = P c / P p > 0.2) can serve as nanogenerators, thermally promoting electromagnetic wave absorption by 250%, with broadened bandwidth covering the whole investigated frequency. This finding of nonionic energy conversion opens up an unexpected horizon for converting, storing, and reusing waste electromagnetic energy, providing the most promising way for governing electromagnetic pollution with self‐powered and self‐circulated electromagnetic devices.

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