Toward Flexible and Wearable Zn–Air Batteries from Cotton Textile Waste
Author(s) -
Xingyang Huang,
Jie Liu,
Jia Ding,
Yida Deng,
Wenbin Hu,
Cheng Zhong
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
acs omega
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.779
H-Index - 40
ISSN - 2470-1343
DOI - 10.1021/acsomega.9b02740
Subject(s) - materials science , battery (electricity) , cathode , substrate (aquarium) , thin film , electrode , current collector , anode , textile , composite material , nanotechnology , electrical engineering , power (physics) , chemistry , oceanography , physics , quantum mechanics , geology , engineering
Considering the environmental problems caused by a large amount of cotton textile waste and its possible applications in flexible electrodes, it is very promising to reuse the cotton textile waste as an electrode material, reducing the cost of flexible electrodes and alleviating environmental problems. In this work, we present a rechargeable flexible Zn-air battery based on cotton textile waste, which employs Ni-metallized cotton textile waste (NMCTW) as a flexible substrate for Zn anodes and air cathodes. The transparent NiFe hydroxide thin film horizontally grown on the surface of the NMCTW substrate was synthesized in situ by the electrodeposition method, which exhibits excellent catalytic activity because of the high surface area of the two-dimensional (2D) thin film, large contact area between the thin film and substrate, and fast charge transport of the 2D thin-film structure. In view of the high catalytic performance of the NiFe hydroxide thin film, it was used as the catalytic material of the air cathode for the flexible Zn-air battery. The assembled Zn-air battery based on cotton textile waste demonstrated a good rate performance and outstanding charge and discharge cycling stability. The assembled Zn-air battery was applied to power the light-emitting diode, which exhibits exceptional flexibility and stable output power even under severe mechanical bending deformation, proving the feasibility for its application in flexible electronics.
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