RESUMO
Dynamic tuning of metamaterials is a critical step toward advanced functionality and improved bandwidth. In the visible spectrum, full spectral color tuning is inhibited by the large absorption that accompanies index changes, particularly at blue wavelengths. Here, we show that the electrochemical lithiation of anatase TiO2 to Li0.5TiO2 (LTO) results in an index change of 0.65 at 649 nm with absorption coefficient less than 0.1 at blue wavelengths, making this material well-suited for dynamic visible color tuning. Dynamic tunability of TiO2 is leveraged in a Fabry-Perot cavity and a gap plasmon metasurface. In the Fabry-Perot configuration, the device exhibits a shift in reflectance of over 100 nm when subjected to only 2 V bias while the gap plasmon metasurface achieves enhanced switching speed. The dynamic range, speed, and cyclability indicate that the TiO2/LTO system is competitive with established actuators like WO3, with the additional advantage of reduced absorption at high frequencies.
RESUMO
In this study, we demonstrate that elastic strain applied to a current collector can influence the overall thermodynamic and kinetic picture of sodium metal electrodeposition and hence the performance of a sodium metal battery. To controllably study the role of strain in electrochemical performance, we utilize NiTi foil as a stable current collector, nucleation interface, and superelastic material. Our findings demonstrate that a locked-in elastic tensile strain near 8% results in 40 mV lower onset potential for sodium electrodeposition, 19% decrease in charge transfer resistance, and 20% lower cumulative sodium loss, among other effects. These performance improvements are correlated primarily to the control of the irreversible behavior in the first few minutes of electroplating. Given the prevalence of strain buildup in commercial battery cell configurations, our work highlights that strained current collector interfaces can result in significant long-term chemo-mechanical performance outcomes broadly relevant to sodium and other metal battery design considerations.
RESUMO
Here, we demonstrate the utilization of biocompatible Prussian blue (PB) active coatings onto polyester-carbon nanotube (CNT) threads to enable a fiber-based platform for both power harvesting and continuous motion sensing. First, we show experimental evidence supporting that the mechanistic power generating mechanical-electrochemical coupling in an electrochemical generator (ECG) is best achieved with K-ion insertion, in contrast to the expected preference for Li-ion insertion for batteries. We then construct KPB fibers and demonstrate power generation in an ECG device up to 3.8 µW/cm2 at low frequencies relevant to human motion in either an aqueous or polymer gel electrolyte media. Further, by stitching these yarns into gloves or arm sleeves, our results show the continuous monitoring of finger or arm motion, respectively, during slow and repetitive human motion. Overall, our work demonstrates an ECG platform that overcomes the performance and integration barriers toward combined textile integration and human motion sensing while leveraging common materials and understanding extending from alkali metal-ion batteries.