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JournalISSN: 1359-6640

Faraday Discussions 

Royal Society of Chemistry
About: Faraday Discussions is an academic journal published by Royal Society of Chemistry. The journal publishes majorly in the area(s): Chemistry & Medicine. It has an ISSN identifier of 1359-6640. Over the lifetime, 3959 publications have been published receiving 126460 citations.
Topics: Chemistry, Medicine, Catalysis, Excited state, Ion


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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The TENG can be a sensor that directly converts a mechanical triggering into a self-generated electric signal for detection of motion, vibration, mechanical stimuli, physical touching, and biological movement and is a new paradigm for energy harvesting.
Abstract: Triboelectrification is one of the most common effects in our daily life, but it is usually taken as a negative effect with very limited positive applications. Here, we invented a triboelectric nanogenerator (TENG) based on organic materials that is used to convert mechanical energy into electricity. The TENG is based on the conjunction of triboelectrification and electrostatic induction, and it utilizes the most common materials available in our daily life, such as papers, fabrics, PTFE, PDMS, Al, PVC etc. In this short review, we first introduce the four most fundamental modes of TENG, based on which a range of applications have been demonstrated. The area power density reaches 1200 W m−2, volume density reaches 490 kW m−3, and an energy conversion efficiency of ∼50–85% has been demonstrated. The TENG can be applied to harvest all kinds of mechanical energy that is available in our daily life, such as human motion, walking, vibration, mechanical triggering, rotation energy, wind, a moving automobile, flowing water, rain drops, tide and ocean waves. Therefore, it is a new paradigm for energy harvesting. Furthermore, TENG can be a sensor that directly converts a mechanical triggering into a self-generated electric signal for detection of motion, vibration, mechanical stimuli, physical touching, and biological movement. After a summary of TENG for micro-scale energy harvesting, mega-scale energy harvesting, and self-powered systems, we will present a set of questions that need to be discussed and explored for applications of the TENG. Lastly, since the energy conversion efficiencies for each mode can be different although the materials are the same, depending on the triggering conditions and design geometry. But one common factor that determines the performance of all the TENGs is the charge density on the two surfaces, the saturation value of which may independent of the triggering configurations of the TENG. Therefore, the triboelectric charge density or the relative charge density in reference to a standard material (such as polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE)) can be taken as a measuring matrix for characterizing the performance of the material for the TENG.

1,169 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The authors measured the thickness dependence of thin films of poly(methyl methacrylate) by using spectroscopic ellipsometry to detect the discontinuity in thermal expansivity occurring at Tg.
Abstract: We have measured the thickness dependence of the glass-transition temperature (Tg) of thin films of poly(methyl methacrylate)(PMMA) by using spectroscopic ellipsometry to detect the discontinuity in thermal expansivity occurring at Tg. We studied films on two surfaces: the native oxide of silicon, and evaporated gold. The Tg of PMMA on a gold surface decreases with decreasing film thickness, in accordance with previous results for polystyrene on silicon. We suggest that at the air surface a liquid-like layer exists whose size diverges as Tg is approached from below. For films of PMMA on the native oxide of silicon, however, we find a slight increase in Tg with decreasing thickness. We speculate that hydrogen bonding at the interface restricts mobility and leads to an increase in Tg, outweighing the effect of the free surface.

922 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The hydrogen evolution reaction (HER) on carbon supported MoS2 nanoparticles is investigated and compared to findings with previously published work on Au(111) supported Mo S2, and calculated values for the hydrogen binding energies on each system are compared.
Abstract: The hydrogen evolution reaction (HER) on carbon supported MoS2nanoparticles is investigated and compared to findings with previously published work on Au(111) supported MoS2. An investigation into MoS2oxidation is presented and used to quantify the surface concentration of MoS2. Other metal sulfides with morphologies similar to MoS2 such as WS2, cobalt-promoted WS2, and cobalt-promoted MoS2 were also investigated in the search for improved HER activity. Experimental findings are compared to density functional theory (DFT) calculated values for the hydrogen binding energies (ΔGH) on each system.

706 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is shown theoretically that viscoelastic layers with thicknesses comparable to the biofilms studied in this work can induce energy dissipation of the same magnitude as the measured ones.
Abstract: We have measured the energy dissipation of the quartz crystal microbalance(QCM), operating in the liquid phase, when mono- or multi-layers of bio-molecules and biofilms form on the QCM electrode (with a time resolution of ca. 1 s). Examples are taken from protein adsorption, lipid vesicle adsorption and cell adhesion studies. Our results show that even very thin (a few nm) biofilms dissipate a significant amount of energy owing to the QCM oscillation. Various mechanisms for this energy dissipation are discussed. Three main contributions to the measured increase in energy dissipation are considered. (i) A viscoelastic porous structure (the biofilm) that is strained during oscillation, (ii) trapped liquid that moves between or in and out of the pores due to the deformation of the film and (iii) the load from the bulk liquid which increases the strain of the film. These mechanisms are, in reality, not entirely separable, rather, they constitute an effective viscoelastic load. The biofilms can therefore not be considered rigidly coupled to the QCM oscillation. It is further shown theoretically that viscoelastic layers with thicknesses comparable to the biofilms studied in this work can induce energy dissipation of the same magnitude as the measured ones.

667 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
Nicholas Stone1, C Kendall1, Jenny Smith1, Paul Crow1, Hugh Barr1 
TL;DR: The discussions outline the likely work required for successful implementation of in vivo Raman detection of early malignancies and the potential for Raman spectroscopy to achieve this goal is evaluated.
Abstract: There is a real need for improvements in cancer detection. Significant problems are encountered when utilising the gold standard of excisional biopsy combined with histopathology. This can include missed lesions, perforation and high levels of inter- and intra-observer discrepancies. The clinical requirements for an objective, non-invasive real time probe for accurate and repeatable measurement of tissue pathological state are overwhelming. This study has evaluated the potential for Raman spectroscopy to achieve this goal. The technique measures the molecular specific inelastic scattering of laser light within tissue, thus enabling the analysis of biochemical changes that precede and accompany disease processes. Initial work has been carried out to optimise a commercially available Raman microspectrometer for tissue measurements; to target potential malignancies with a clinical need for diagnostic improvements (oesophagus, colon, breast, and prostate) and to build and test spectral libraries and prediction algorithms for tissue types and pathologies. This study has followed rigorous sample collection protocols and histopathological analysis using a board of expert pathologists. Only the data from samples with full agreement of a homogeneous pathology have been used to construct a training data set of Raman spectra. Measurements of tissue specimens from the full spectrum of different pathological groups found in each tissue have been made. Diagnostic predictive models have been constructed and optimised using multivariate analysis techniques. They have been tested using cross-validation or leave-one-out and demonstrated high levels of discrimination between pathology groups (greater than 90% sensitivity and specificity for all tissues). However larger sample numbers are required for further evaluation. The discussions outline the likely work required for successful implementation of in vivo Raman detection of early malignancies.

624 citations

Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Journal in previous years
YearPapers
2023174
2022311
2021185
202090
2019215
2018172