Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10397/115664
Title: Rapid and sustainable fabrication of flexible triboelectric nanogenerators via electrochemical replication and transfer
Authors: Fu, J 
Chen, Z 
Xu, G
Zi, Y
Li, X
Liang, J 
Chen, F 
Huang, Q 
Yu, X
Zheng, Z 
Issue Date: 8-Jul-2025
Source: ACS nano, 8 July 2025, v. 19, no. 26, p. 23539-23551
Abstract: The rapid development of the Internet of Things and smart wearables seeks lightweight and battery-free technology that can power a wide variety of sensor nodes. Flexible triboelectric nanogenerators (f-TENGs) have garnered pronounced interest due to their versatile and efficient conversion of low-frequency mechanical motions into electricity, which can be directly applied for self-powered, battery-free electronics. While by 2035 the demand for small electronic devices may exceed a trillion pieces, the fabrication of f-TENGs nowadays is low-efficient and costly and cannot sustain the future’s green-manufacturing requirement. Herein, we report a rapid and sustainable fabrication process that produces f-TENG with high-resolution patterns and long-lasting durability that fit the needs of a wide variety of flexible electronic applications. Via an electrochemical replication and transfer (ERT) approach, we fabricate submicron-structured f-TENG electrodes at a high throughput (10 p·h-1) and a very low cost (1 $·p-1). The life-cycle assessment (LCA) analysis shows that the carbon emission of a single piece of f-TENG fabricated by the ERT-based approach is 21 kg·CO2-eq, the lowest among the reported results. We illustrate the versatility of this sustainable fabrication for a wide range of f-TENG, such as self-powered optics and on-skin sensor arrays.
Keywords: Electrochemical replication and transfer
Flexible electronics
Micro and nanofabrication
Sustainability
Triboelectric nanogenerators
Publisher: American Chemical Society
Journal: ACS nano 
ISSN: 1936-0851
EISSN: 1936-086X
DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.4c15200
Appears in Collections:Journal/Magazine Article

Open Access Information
Status embargoed access
Embargo End Date 2026-06-26
Access
View full-text via PolyU eLinks SFX Query
Show full item record

Google ScholarTM

Check

Altmetric


Items in DSpace are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.