4.8 Article

Hybrid printing of wearable piezoelectric sensors

Journal

NANO ENERGY
Volume 90, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.nanoen.2021.106522

Keywords

Additive manufacturing; Piezoelectricity; Tellurium nanowire; Wearable sensor

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation [CMMI-1762698, CMMI-1747685]
  2. U.S. Department of Energy [DE-NE0008712]
  3. School of Industrial Engineering at Purdue University

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This study presents a novel wearable piezoelectric device fabricated using a unique material and process, featuring excellent performance and stretchability without the need for sintering and poling processing. The device can be used for gesture recognition and heartbeat monitoring, offering great potential for integration with a wide range of printed electronics and wearable devices.
Piezoelectricity provides an ideal electromechanical mechanism with emerging applications in wearable devices due to its simplicity and self-powered nature. However, the 3D printing of piezoelectric devices still faces many challenges, including material printability, high energy poling process, and low dimensional accuracy. This study demonstrates, for the first time, a tellurium nanowire-based piezoelectric device fabricated by a hybrid printing method integrating highly complementary aerosol jet printing and extrusion printing in a single printing platform. The aerosol-jet-printed tellurium nanowire demonstrates piezoelectric properties without the need for any poling processing due to the unique properties of the tellurium nanowires. The silver nanowire electrodes printed by aerosol jet printing demonstrate excellent conductivity and stretchability without the need for sintering. An extrusion method is employed to print the silicone films, which serve as the stretchable substrate and the electrical insulation layers between the printed tellurium and silver. The printed wearable piezoelectric devices were attached to a human wrist to detect different hand gestures and to a human neck to detect heartbeat without using an external power source. The fully printed, sintering-free and poling-free, and stretchable piezoelectric device opens enormous opportunities for facile integration with a broad range of printed electronics and wearable devices.

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