4.7 Article

Origami paper-based fluidic batteries for portable electrophoretic devices

Journal

LAB ON A CHIP
Volume 14, Issue 12, Pages 2124-2130

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/c4lc00091a

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Science Council in Taiwan [NSC 102-2221-E-002-080, NSC 101-2221-E-002-177-MY2]

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A manufacturing approach for paper-based fluidic batteries was developed based on the origami principle (three-dimension paper folding). Microfluidic channels were first created on a filter paper by a wax-printing method. Copper and aluminium sheets were then glued onto the paper as electrodes for the redox reaction. After the addition of copper sulphate and aluminium chloride, commonly available cellophane paper was attached as a membrane to separate the two electrodes. The resulting planar paper sheets were then folded into three-dimensional structures and compiled as a single battery with glue. The two half reactions (Al/Al3+ and Cu/Cu2+) in the folded batteries provided an open-circuit potential from 0.82 V (one cell) to 5.0 V (eight cells in series) depending on the origami design. The prepared battery can provide a stable current of 500 mu A and can light a regular LED for more than 65 min. These paper-based fluidic batteries in a set can also be compiled into a portable power bank to provide electric power for many electric or biomedical applications, such as LED lights and electrophoretic devices, as we report here.

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