Publication | Closed Access
Fundamental study of mechanical energy harvesting using piezoelectric nanostructures
144
Citations
36
References
2010
Year
EngineeringEnergy ConversionMechanical EngineeringEnergy Conversion EfficiencyPiezoelectric NanostructuresVibrationsNanoengineeringPiezoelectric MaterialMaterials ScienceEnergy HarvestingNanotechnologyPiezoelectric MaterialsPiezoelectricityMechanical VibrationNanophysicsNanomaterialsPiezoelectric NanogeneratorsNano Electro Mechanical SystemSelf-powered Nanodevices
The study numerically estimates the potential, output power, and energy conversion efficiency of piezoelectric nanostructures—including rectangular and hexagonal nanowires and two‑dimensional vertical thin films—and analyzes the maximum piezoelectric potential of BaTiO3, ZnO nanowires, and ZnO nanofins under static loading. Dynamic responses of ZnO nanowires and nanofins are modeled as single‑degree‑of‑freedom systems, and their mechanical vibration and piezoelectric charge transfer functions are combined to compute output power and efficiency as functions of vibration frequency, size, and material (ZnO, BaTiO3, PZN‑PT). The analysis identifies optimal nanostructure sizes for high‑efficiency, high‑power generation, reveals a comprehensive relationship between harvesting ability and morphology, dimensions, and material properties, and offers design guidelines for high‑power nanogenerators and piezoelectric nanodevices.
This paper numerically estimates the potential, the output power and the energy conversion efficiency of piezoelectric nanostructures, including rectangular nanowires (NWs), hexagonal NWs, and two-dimensional vertical thin films (the nanofins). Static analysis studies the maximum piezoelectric potential that can be produced by a BaTiO3 NW, a ZnO NW, and a ZnO nanofin when they are subjected to a constant external force. Dynamic analysis is performed to study the power generation ability via the vibration of these nanostructures agitated by ambient vibration energy. ZnO NW and nanofin are selected as two representative nanogenerator elements. Their dynamic responses are modeled using a single-degree of freedom system with a series of damping ratios. Combining the transfer functions of mechanical vibration and piezoelectric charge generation, we define the output power and efficiencies as functions of the vibration frequency and the sizes. The optimal size for constructing a high efficiency and high-power nanogenerator is suggested. The material dependence of a dynamic system is also studied based on different piezoelectric and ferroelectric material systems, including ZnO, BaTiO3, and (1−x)Pb(Mg1/3Nb2/3)O3−xPbTiO3. This research reveals a comprehensive relationship between the mechanical energy harvesting ability and the nanomaterials’ morphologies, dimensions, and properties. It provides a guideline for the design of high-power nanogenerators and the development of piezoelectric nanodevices in general.
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