Velour Fabric as an Island-Bridge Architectural Design for Stretchable Textile-Based Lithium-ion Battery Electrodes

Document Type

Article

Publication Date

11-18-2020

Publication Title

ACS Applied Materials and Interfaces

Volume

12

Issue

46

First Page

51679

Keywords

island-bridge structures, lithium-ion batteries, stretchable e-textiles, textile battery, wearable electronics

Last Page

51687

Abstract

The advancement of wearable electronics depends on the seamless integration of lightweight and stretchable energy storage devices with textiles. Integrating brittle energy storage materials with soft and stretchable textiles, however, presents a challenging mechanical mismatch. It is critical to protect brittle energy storage materials from strain-induced damage and at the same time preserve the softness and stretchability of the functionalized e-textile. Here, we demonstrate the strategic use of a warp-knitted velour fabric in an "island-bridge"architectural strain-engineering design to prepare stretchable textile-based lithium-ion battery (LIB) electrodes. The velour fabric consists of a warp-knitted framework and a cut pile. We integrate the LIB electrode into this fabric by solution-based metallization to create the warp-knitted framework current collector "bridges"followed by selective deposition of the brittle electroactive material CuS on the cut pile "islands". As the textile electrode is stretched, the warp-knitted framework current collector elongates, while the electroactive cut pile fibers simply ride along at their anchor points on the framework, protecting the brittle CuS coating from strain and subsequent damage. The textile-based stretchable LIB electrode exhibited excellent electrical and electrochemical performance with a current collector sheet resistance of 0.85 ± 0.06 ω/sq and a specific capacity of 400 mAh/g at 0.5 C for 300 charging-discharging cycles as well as outstanding rate capability. The electrical performance and charge-discharge cycling stability of the electrode persisted even after 1000 repetitive stretching-releasing cycles, demonstrating the protective functionality of the textile-based island-bridge architectural strain-engineering design.

DOI

10.1021/acsami.0c16801

ISSN

19448244

E-ISSN

19448252

PubMed ID

33155809

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