APS March Meeting 2011
Volume 56, Number 1
Monday–Friday, March 21–25, 2011;
Dallas, Texas
Session W3: Advances in ZnO Physics and Applications
11:15 AM–2:15 PM,
Thursday, March 24, 2011
Room: Ballroom A3
Sponsoring
Units:
DCMP DMP
Chair: Scott Chambers, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
Abstract ID: BAPS.2011.MAR.W3.5
Abstract: W3.00005 : Nanogenerators and Piezotronics
1:39 PM–2:15 PM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Zhong Lin Wang
(Georgia Institute of Technology)
Developing wireless nanodevices and nanosystems is of critical
importance
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 battery. This
is a new
initiative in today's energy research for mico/nano-systems in
searching for
sustainable self-sufficient power sources [1]. We have invented an
innovative approach for converting nano-scale mechanical energy into
electric energy by piezoelectric zinc oxide nanowire arrays [2].
As today, a
gentle straining can output 1-3 V from an integrated
nanogenerator, using
which a self-powered nanosensor has been demonstrated. A
commercial LED has
been lid up [3-5].
Due to the polarization of ions in a crystal that has non-central
symmetry,
a piezoelectric potential\textit{ (piezopotential)} is created in
the crystal by applying a stress.
The effect of piezopotential to the transport behavior of charge
carriers is
significant due to their multiple functionalities of
piezoelectricity,
semiconductor and photon excitation. Electronics fabricated by using
inner-crystal piezopotential as a ``gate'' voltage to
tune/control the
charge transport behavior is named \textit{piezotronics
[6,7].Piezo-phototronic effect} is a result of three-way coupling
among
piezoelectricity, photonic excitation and semiconductor
transport, which
allows tuning and controlling of electro-optical processes by
strain induced
piezopotential [8].
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[1] Z.L. Wang, \textit{Scientific American}, 298 (2008) 82-87;
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[2] Z.L. Wang and J.H. Song, \textit{Science}, 312 (2006) 242-246.
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[3] R.S. Yang, Y. Qin, L.M. Dai and Z.L. Wang, \textit{Nature
Nanotechnology}, 4 (2009) 34-39.
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[4] S. Xu, Y. Qin, C. Xu, Y.G. Wei, R.S. Yang, Z.L. Wang,
\textit{Nature Nanotechnology}, 5 (2010) 366.
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[5] G. Zhu, R.S. Yang, S.H. Wang, and Z.L. Wang , Nano Letters,
10 (2010) 3151.
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[6] Z.L. Wang, \textit{Adv. Mater}., 19 (2007) 889-992.
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[7] W.Z. Wu, Y.G. Wei and Zhong Lin Wang , Adv. Materials, DOI:
adma.201001925.
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[8] Y.F. Hu, Y.L. Chang, P. Fei, R.L. Snyder and Z.L. Wang,
\textit{ACS Nano}, $4$ (2010)
1234--1240.
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[9] Research supported by DARPA, DOE, NSF, Airforce, NIH,
Samsung. For details: http://www.nanoscience.gatech.edu/zlwang/.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2011.MAR.W3.5