Abstract

Triboelectric nanogenerator (TENG) has overwhelming dominance in the exploitation of low-frequency vibration energy, but the sparse pulsed output, material abrasion in contact-mode TENG and output decline in noncontact-mode TENG limit the output power and electrical stability. Herein, we report a rotational intermittent-contact TENG (IC-TENG) that is realized on the basis of a slideable rope-driven rotor to achieve efficient exploitation of low-frequency vibrations. The rope-driven rotor can start to spin and transform low-frequency vibrations to high-speed rotation through a whirligig-like dynamics mechanism without the requirement of any hand operation, which enables frequency-multiplied and high electric output of the IC-TENG. Moreover, owing to the constantly replenished tribo-charges produced by the intermittent sliding contact between the rotator and stator in the rope-driven rotor, the IC-TENG exhibits high electrical stability, whose normalized electric output stabilizes at around 81%, whereas the normalized electric output of noncontact-mode TENG attenuates continuously to 48% over a 10-day span. The frequency-multiplied electric output and superior electrical stability make the IC-TENG a promising technology for harnessing ambient low-frequency vibration energy. This work demonstrates a novel strategy for TENG to achieve high electric output and in the meanwhile long-term stability.

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