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Piezoelectric and optoelectronic properties of electrospinning hybrid PVDF and ZnO nanofibers
72
Citations
45
References
2018
Year
EngineeringZno NanofibersFiber SpinningConducting PolymerChemical EngineeringNanoengineeringPiezoelectric MaterialHybrid MaterialsMaterials ScienceElectroactive MaterialElectrical EngineeringEnergy HarvestingPolyvinylidene FluorideOptoelectronic PropertiesNanofibersPiezoelectricityHybrid PvdfNanofiberElectronic MaterialsFlexible ElectronicsNanomaterialsPiezoelectric NanogeneratorsFerroelectric MaterialsPiezoelectric GeneratorsSelf-powered NanodevicesFunctional Materials
Polyvinylidene fluoride (PVDF) is a unique ferroelectric polymer with significant promise for energy harvesting, data storage, and sensing applications. ZnO is a wide direct band gap semiconductor (3.37 eV), commonly used as ultraviolet photodetectors, nanoelectronics, photonicsand piezoelectric generators. In this study, we produced high output piezoelectric energy harvesting materials using hybrid PVDF/ZnO nanofibers deposited via electrospinning. The strong electric fields and stretching forces during the electrospinning process helps to align dipoles in the nanofiber crystal such that the nonpolar α-phase (random orientation of dipoles) is transformed into polar β-phase in produced nanofibers. The effect of the additional ZnO nanowires on the nanofiber β-phase composition and output voltage are investigated. The maximum output voltage generated by a single hybrid PVDF and ZnO nanofiber (33 wt% ZnO nanowires) is over 300% of the voltage produced by a single nanofiber made of pure PVDF. The ZnO NWs served not only as a piezoelectric material, but also as a semiconducting material. The electrical conductivity of the hybrid PVDF/ZnO nanofibers increased by more than a factor of 4 when exposed under ultraviolet (UV) light.
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