Edinburgh Research Archive

Zinc oxide nanowires integrated with flexible polymer energy harvester devices for biomedical applications

dc.contributor.advisor
Cheung, Rebecca
dc.contributor.advisor
Hands, Philip
dc.contributor.author
Bin Che Mahzan, Muhammad Ammar
dc.date.accessioned
2023-05-15T15:14:14Z
dc.date.available
2023-05-15T15:14:14Z
dc.date.issued
2023-05-15
dc.description.abstract
Flexible piezoelectric energy harvester devices for biomedical applications have been developed and characterized using different encapsulation polymers and ZnO NW growth patterns. A flexible piezoelectric energy harvester device must be biocompatible, cheap, low-temperature, and scalable. The device must also produce a minimum voltage output of 1 volt for pacemakers. This work examines the growth of hydrothermal-grown ZnO NWs in terms of length, diameter, and density under different growth conditions. Precursor concentration, substrate type, and seed layer thickness were considered. Kapton film and silicon substrates were compared to understand how surface roughness affects ZnO NW growth. The best vertically aligned ZnO NW growth occurred at 200 nm silver seed layer thickness and 40 mM precursor concentration. Synthesis took 18 hours at 90 °C. The devices were sandwich-like nanogenerators with ZnO nanostructures embedded in a dielectric polymer matrix between top and bottom electrodes. Testing showed that the best encapsulation was Polyimide (PI) with a thickness of 7 μm and a resistance of ~24 MΩ. Electrical leakage during polarization prevented PVDF-TrFE encapsulation from working. For ZnO NW growth, a circular seed layer with varied diameter was designed. Circular area diameter increases piezoelectric response. As the seed layer diameter increased, ZnO NW growth morphology showed an increase in small empty patches. Thus a new design with several 1 mm by 1 mm square areas patterned within a larger 15 mm by 15 mm area with varying distances between the small squares. When the squares were 0.1 mm apart, piezoelectric response (1297 mV) and sensitivity (14.75 mV/kPa) were best. The software Coventorware10 was used to run simulations using the finite element method (FEM). The ZnO NWs height, diameter, density, substrate area, applied pressure, encapsulating polymer, and design are some of the variables that will affect the piezoelectric response and sensitivity of the device. The FEM simulations that were run help in understanding these variables. Using collected data, the optimised device was made. Substrate (Kapton film), seed layer (200 nm Ag), polymer encapsulating ZnO NWs (PI 7 μm), and design (distance between 1 mm by 1 mm ZnO NWs pads of 0.1mm). Finally, the fabricated flexible pressure sensor was compared to FEM simulations. Trends are similar. The findings from this research can potentially be valuable in understanding the fabrication and design of a flexible MEMS pressure sensor in biomedical applications and potentially for other applications.
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dc.identifier.uri
https://hdl.handle.net/1842/40565
dc.identifier.uri
http://dx.doi.org/10.7488/era/3330
dc.language.iso
en
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dc.publisher
The University of Edinburgh
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dc.relation.hasversion
Yulin Geng, Karina Jeronimo, Muhammad Ammar Bin Che Mahzan, Peter Lomax, Rebecca Cheung. A simplified patterning process for the selective growth of 1D ZnO nanorods. J. Vac. Sci. Technol. B 38, 012204 (2020).
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dc.relation.hasversion
Yulin Geng, Karina Jeronimo, Muhammad Ammar Bin Che Mahzan, Peter Lomax, Enrico Mastropaolo, Rebecca Cheung. Comparison of ZnO nanowires grown on e-beam evaporated Ag and ZnO seed layers. Nanoscale Adv., 2, 2814 (2020).
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dc.relation.hasversion
Graham S. Wood, Karina Jeronimo, Muhammad Ammar Bin Che Mahzan, Rebecca Cheung and Enrico Mastropaolo. Zinc oxide nanowires-based flexible pressure sensor. Micro Nano Lett. 16, 432– 435 (2021).
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dc.relation.hasversion
Yulin Geng, Muhammad Ammar Bin Che Mahzan, Karina Jeronimo, Muhammad Mubasher Saleem, Peter Lomax, Enrico Mastropaolo, & Rebecca Cheung. Integration of ZnO nanorods with MOS capacitor for self-powered force sensors and nanogenerators. Nanotechnology, 32(45), 455502 (2021).
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dc.relation.hasversion
Yulin Geng, Jing Xu, Muhammad Ammar Bin Che Mahzan, Peter Lomax, Muhammad Mubasher Saleem, Enrico Mastropaolo, & Rebecca Cheung. Mix-dimensional ZnO/WSe2 piezo-gated transistor with active millinewton force-sensing. Applied Materials & Interfaces, 14(43), 49026-49034 (2022).
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dc.subject
Zinc oxide nanowires
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dc.subject
flexible polymer energy harvester devices
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dc.subject
biomedical applications
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dc.subject
Flexible piezoelectric energy harvester devices
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dc.subject
encapsulation polymers
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ZnO NW growth patterns
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dc.subject
finite element method (FEM)
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dc.subject
MEMS pressure sensor
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dc.title
Zinc oxide nanowires integrated with flexible polymer energy harvester devices for biomedical applications
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dc.type
Thesis or Dissertation
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dc.type.qualificationlevel
Doctoral
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dc.type.qualificationname
PhD Doctor of Philosophy
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