4.8 Article

Wearable, freezing-tolerant, and self-powered electroluminescence system for long-term cold-resistant displays

Journal

NANO ENERGY
Volume 98, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.nanoen.2022.107309

Keywords

Wearable optoelectronics; Electroluminescence device; Conductive organohydrogel; Self-powered; Triboelectric nanogenerator; Cold-resistant displays

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [11774384]
  2. First-Class Discipline Cultivation Project of Henan University [2020YLZDYJ10]

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A wearable, freezing-tolerant, and self-powered EL system has been developed, with the stretchable OH-EL device demonstrating excellent optical performance and durability even under extreme conditions.
Tremendous efforts in wearable optoelectronics have recently harnessed considerable advances in intrinsically stretchable electroluminescence (EL) devices. However, developing wearable optoelectronics that maintain long-term stability in harsh cold environments is still challenging. Here, a wearable, freezing-tolerant, and self-powered EL system is developed based on organohydrogel-based EL (OH-EL) device integrated with liquid electrolyte-based single-electrode triboelectric nanogenerator (LE-TENG), in which the OH-EL device based on self-healing and highly conductive organohydrogel electrodes can be directly lit by the LE-TENG. The stretchable OH-EL device demonstrates a bright and uniform light emission under 140% tension stretching as well as severe mechanical deformations of bending, rolling, and twisting. Moreover, the optical performances of the OH-EL device exhibit excellent repeatability and durability after continuous 2000 cycles. More importantly, bright blue-green light emission of the self-powered EL system stored at 253 K can maintain for six months, demon-strating extremely long-term freezing-tolerant capability. Furthermore, while harvesting the biomechanical en-ergy of hand slapping and knee/elbow bending, the self-powered EL system worn on different parts of human body can achieve real-time visualized displays. Consequently, the simple fabrication and unique operation of the self-powered EL system demonstrate potential application in cold-resistant displays, wearable self-powered photoelectric devices, soft robotics, and other fields.

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