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Industrial Applications of Carbon Nanotubes covers the current
applications of carbon nanotubes in various industry sectors, from
the military to visual display products, and energy harvesting and
storage. It also assesses the opportunities and challenges for
increased commercialization and manufacturing of carbon nanotubes
in the years ahead. Real-life case studies illustrate how carbon
nanotubes are used in each industry sector covered, providing a
valuable resource for scientists and engineers who are involved
and/or interested in carbon nanotubes in both academia and
industry. The book serves as a comprehensive guide to the varied
uses of carbon nanotubes for specialists in many related fields,
including chemistry, physics, biology, and textiles.
Polymer Materials for Energy and Electronic Applications is among
the first books to systematically describe the recent developments
in polymer materials and their electronic applications. It covers
the synthesis, structures, and properties of polymers, along with
their composites. In addition, the book introduces, and describes,
four main kinds of electronic devices based on polymers, including
energy harvesting devices, energy storage devices, light-emitting
devices, and electrically driving sensors. Stretchable and wearable
electronics based on polymers are a particular focus and main
achievement of the book that concludes with the future developments
and challenges of electronic polymers and devices.
This book highlights the main advances in fiber electronics, like
fiber-shaped solar cells, batteries, supercapacitors, sensors,
light-emitting devices, memristors and communication devices from
the standpoints of material synthesis, structure design and
property enhancement. It focuses on revealing the separation and
transport mechanisms of charges, establishing transport equations
for electrons and ions, and emphasizing integration methods in
fiber devices. In closing, it reviews emerging applications based
on fiber devices that could accelerate their large-scale production
in the near future. Given its scope, the book offers a valuable
resource for scientists, engineers, graduate students and
undergraduate students in a wide variety of fields such as advanced
materials, energy, electrochemistry, applied physics, nanoscience
and nanotechnology, polymer science and engineering and biomedical
science. It also benefits many non-specialist industrialists who
are working to promote new technologies.
This comprehensive book covers flexible fiber-shaped devices in the
area of energy conversion and storage. The first part of the book
introduces recently developed materials, particularly, various
nanomaterials and composite materials based on nanostructured
carbon such as carbon nanotubes and graphene, metals and polymers
for the construction of fiber electrodes. The second part of the
book focuses on two typical twisted and coaxial architectures of
fiber-shaped devices for energy conversion and storage. The
emphasis is placed on dye-sensitized solar cells, polymer solar
cells, lithium-ion batteries, electrochemical capacitors and
integrated devices. The future development and challenges of these
novel and promising fiber-shaped devices are summarized in the
final part. This book is the first to introduce fiber-shaped
electronic devices, which offer many fascinating advantages
compared with the conventional planar structure. It is particularly
designed to review the state-of-art developments in fiber-shaped
devices for energy conversion and storage. The book will provide a
valuable resource for researchers and students working in a wide
variety of fields such as advanced materials, new energy,
electrochemistry, applied physics, nanoscience and nanotechnology,
and polymer science and engineering. Huisheng Peng, PhD, is a
Professor and Associate Chair of the Department of Macromolecular
Science and PI of the Laboratory of Advanced Materials, Fudan
University, Shanghai, China.
This book highlights the main advances in fiber electronics, like
fiber-shaped solar cells, batteries, supercapacitors, sensors,
light-emitting devices, memristors and communication devices from
the standpoints of material synthesis, structure design and
property enhancement. It focuses on revealing the separation and
transport mechanisms of charges, establishing transport equations
for electrons and ions, and emphasizing integration methods in
fiber devices. In closing, it reviews emerging applications based
on fiber devices that could accelerate their large-scale production
in the near future. Given its scope, the book offers a valuable
resource for scientists, engineers, graduate students and
undergraduate students in a wide variety of fields such as advanced
materials, energy, electrochemistry, applied physics, nanoscience
and nanotechnology, polymer science and engineering and biomedical
science. It also benefits many non-specialist industrialists who
are working to promote new technologies.
Flexible Batteries highlights the key advances in flexible
batteries, a booming new direction in the energy storage field. The
authors first introduce lithium-ion batteries, which are currently
the most widely used batteries. Flexible aqueous batteries such as
aqueous lithium-ion, sodium-ion, and zinc-ion batteries are
discussed subsequently due to the safety concerns in organic
electrolytes. Since flexible metal-air batteries are recognized as
primary choices for the next generation, the authors take
lithium-air and aluminum-air batteries as examples to explore their
applications in flexible battery construction. They further
summarize flexible batteries under the most challenging working
conditions such as stretching and integrating flexible batteries
with flexible energy harvesting devices, sensors, and
supercapacitors. Covering both fundamental and application
development, this book may effectively bridge academics and
industry. It will be helpful not only to scholars and students
studying materials science and engineering, chemical engineering,
physics, energy science, and biomedical science but also to
scientists and engineers in the industry.
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