4.6 Article

From nanogenerators to piezotronics-A decade-long study of ZnO nanostructures

Journal

MRS BULLETIN
Volume 37, Issue 9, Pages 814-827

Publisher

CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1557/mrs.2012.186

Keywords

-

Funding

  1. DARPA
  2. NSF
  3. BES DOE
  4. NIH
  5. NASA
  6. US Airforce
  7. MANA
  8. NIMS (Japan)
  9. Samsung
  10. Chinese Academy of Sciences
  11. Georgia Tech

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Developing wireless nanodevices and nanosystems is critical for sensing, medical science, environmental/infrastructure monitoring, defense technology, and even personal electronics. It is highly desirable for wireless devices to be self-powered without using a battery. We have developed piezoelectric nanogenerators that can serve as self-sufficient power sources for micro-/nanosystems. For wurtzite structures that have non-central symmetry, such as ZnO, GaN, and InN, a piezoelectric potential (piezopotential) is created by applying a strain. The nanogenerator uses the piezopotential as the driving force, responding to dynamic straining of piezoelectric nanowires. A gentle strain can produce an output voltage of up to 20-40 V from an integrated nanogenerator. Furthermore, piezopotential in the wurtzite structure can serve as a gate voltage that can effectively tune/control charge transport across an interface/junction; electronics based on such a mechanism are referred to as piezotronics, with applications such as electronic devices that are triggered or controlled by force or pressure, sensors, logic units, and memory. By using the piezotronic effect, we show that optoelectronic devices fabricated using wurtzite materials can provide superior performance for solar cells, photon detectors, and light-emitting diodes. Piezotronic devices are likely to serve as mediators for directly interfacing biomechanical action with silicon-based technology. This article reviews our study of ZnO nanostructures over the last 12 years, with a focus on nanogenerators and piezotronics.

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