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      Anisotropic Wooden Electromechanical Transduction Devices Enhanced by TEMPO Oxidization and PDMS

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          Abstract

          In order to increase the number and contact probability of electric dipole on cellulose, acid and alkali treatment was employed to extract hemicellulose and lignin from original wood to gain a highly oriented cellulose frame. The combined means with 2,2,6,6-tetramethylpiperidine-1-oxyl–NaBr–NaClO oxidation and impregnation of PDMS with compression was subsequently used to enhance its mechanical performance and electromechanical conversion. The assembled wooden electromechanical device (10 mm × 10 mm × 1 mm) exhibits the maximum open-circuit voltage ( V OC) of 11.75 V and short-circuit current ( I SC) of 211.01 nA as stepped by foot. It can be sliced to fabricate a flexible sensor with high sensitivity displaying V OC of 2.88 V and I SC of 210.09 nA under the tapped state. Its highly oriented wood fiber makes it display significant anisotropy in terms of mechanical and electromechanical performance for multidirectional sense. This strategy will exactly provide reference for developing other high-performance piezoelectric devices.

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          Wood-Derived Materials for Green Electronics, Biological Devices, and Energy Applications.

          With the arising of global climate change and resource shortage, in recent years, increased attention has been paid to environmentally friendly materials. Trees are sustainable and renewable materials, which give us shelter and oxygen and remove carbon dioxide from the atmosphere. Trees are a primary resource that human society depends upon every day, for example, homes, heating, furniture, and aircraft. Wood from trees gives us paper, cardboard, and medical supplies, thus impacting our homes, school, work, and play. All of the above-mentioned applications have been well developed over the past thousands of years. However, trees and wood have much more to offer us as advanced materials, impacting emerging high-tech fields, such as bioengineering, flexible electronics, and clean energy. Wood naturally has a hierarchical structure, composed of well-oriented microfibers and tracheids for water, ion, and oxygen transportation during metabolism. At higher magnification, the walls of fiber cells have an interesting morphology-a distinctly mesoporous structure. Moreover, the walls of fiber cells are composed of thousands of fibers (or macrofibrils) oriented in a similar angle. Nanofibrils and nanocrystals can be further liberated from macrofibrils by mechanical, chemical, and enzymatic methods. The obtained nanocellulose has unique optical, mechanical, and barrier properties and is an excellent candidate for chemical modification and reconfiguration. Wood is naturally a composite material, comprised of cellulose, hemicellulose, and lignin. Wood is sustainable, earth abundant, strong, biodegradable, biocompatible, and chemically accessible for modification; more importantly, multiscale natural fibers from wood have unique optical properties applicable to different kinds of optoelectronics and photonic devices. Today, the materials derived from wood are ready to be explored for applications in new technology areas, such as electronics, biomedical devices, and energy. The goal of this study is to review the fundamental structures and chemistries of wood and wood-derived materials, which are essential for a wide range of existing and new enabling technologies. The scope of the review covers multiscale materials and assemblies of cellulose, hemicellulose, and lignin as well as other biomaterials derived from wood, in regard to their major emerging applications. Structure-properties-application relationships will be investigated in detail. Understanding the fundamental properties of these structures is crucial for designing and manufacturing products for emerging applications. Today, a more holistic understanding of the interplay between the structure, chemistry, and performance of wood and wood-derived materials is advancing historical applications of these materials. This new level of understanding also enables a myriad of new and exciting applications, which motivate this review. There are excellent reviews already on the classical topic of woody materials, and some recent reviews also cover new understanding of these materials as well as potential applications. This review will focus on the uniqueness of woody materials for three critical applications: green electronics, biological devices, and energy storage and bioenergy.
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            Homogeneous suspensions of individualized microfibrils from TEMPO-catalyzed oxidation of native cellulose.

            Never-dried native celluloses (bleached sulfite wood pulp, cotton, tunicin, and bacterial cellulose) were disintegrated into individual microfibrils after oxidation mediated by the 2,2,6,6-tetramethylpiperidine-1-oxyl (TEMPO) radical followed by a homogenizing mechanical treatment. When oxidized with 3.6 mmol of NaClO per gram of cellulose, almost the totality of sulfite wood pulp and cotton were readily disintegrated into long individual microfibrils by a treatment with a Waring Blendor, yielding transparent and highly viscous suspensions. When observed by transmission electron microscopy, the wood pulp and cotton microfibrils exhibited a regular width of 3-5 nm. Tunicin and bacterial cellulose could be disintegrated by sonication. A bulk degree of oxidation of about 0.2 per one anhydroglucose unit of cellulose was necessary for a smooth disintegration of sulfite wood pulp, whereas only small amounts of independent microfibrils were obtained at lower oxidation levels. This limiting degree of oxidation decreased in the following order: sulfite wood pulp > cotton > bacterial cellulose, tunicin.
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              Contact electrification

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                ACS Omega
                ACS Omega
                ao
                acsodf
                ACS Omega
                American Chemical Society
                2470-1343
                20 January 2023
                31 January 2023
                : 8
                : 4
                : 3945-3955
                Affiliations
                []School of Resources, Environment and Materials, Guangxi University , Nanning 530004, China
                []MOE Key Laboratory of New Processing Technology for Non-Ferrous Metals and Materials & Guangxi Key Laboratory of Processing for Non-Ferrous Metals and Featured Materials, Guangxi University , Nanning 530004, China
                Author notes
                Author information
                https://orcid.org/0000-0001-9376-9246
                Article
                10.1021/acsomega.2c06607
                9893449
                b82e5f1c-bea6-461a-b6ab-edd0e19b9cb5
                © 2023 The Authors. Published by American Chemical Society

                Permits non-commercial access and re-use, provided that author attribution and integrity are maintained; but does not permit creation of adaptations or other derivative works ( https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).

                History
                : 13 October 2022
                : 27 December 2022
                Funding
                Funded by: National Natural Science Foundation of China, doi 10.13039/501100001809;
                Award ID: 32071695
                Categories
                Article
                Custom metadata
                ao2c06607
                ao2c06607

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