4.7 Article

Seedless Hydrothermal Growth of ZnO Nanorods as a Promising Route for Flexible Tactile Sensors

Journal

NANOMATERIALS
Volume 10, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/nano10050977

Keywords

ZnO nanorods; seedless hydrothermal growth; Finite-Element Analysis; PDMS-embedded devices; tactile sensors; flexible substrates; vibrations

Funding

  1. National Institute for Insurance against Accidents atWork (INAIL) via MOTU project
  2. National Institute for Insurance against Accidents atWork (INAIL) via SENSE RISC project
  3. Italian Ministry of Education, Universities and Research [SIN_00132]

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Hydrothermal growth of ZnO nanorods has been widely used for the development of tactile sensors, with the aid of ZnO seed layers, favoring the growth of dense and vertically aligned nanorods. However, seed layers represent an additional fabrication step in the sensor design. In this study, a seedless hydrothermal growth of ZnO nanorods was carried out on Au-coated Si and polyimide substrates. The effects of both the Au morphology and the growth temperature on the characteristics of the nanorods were investigated, finding that smaller Au grains produced tilted rods, while larger grains provided vertical rods. Highly dense and high-aspect-ratio nanorods with hexagonal prismatic shape were obtained at 75 degrees C and 85 degrees C, while pyramid-like rods were grown when the temperature was set to 95 degrees C. Finite-element simulations demonstrated that prismatic rods produce higher voltage responses than the pyramid-shaped ones. A tactile sensor, with an active area of 1 cm(2), was fabricated on flexible polyimide substrate and embedding the nanorods forest in a polydimethylsiloxane matrix as a separation layer between the bottom and the top Au electrodes. The prototype showed clear responses upon applied loads of 2-4 N and vibrations over frequencies in the range of 20-800 Hz.

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