Tribo-piezoelectric Nanogenerators for Energy Harvesting: a first-principles study
Jemal Yimer Damte, Jiri Houskaa

TL;DR
This study uses first-principles calculations to explore the electronic and transport properties of TMD heterostructures, proposing their potential for tribo-piezoelectric nanogenerators in energy harvesting.
Contribution
It introduces a novel approach of applying strain to TMD heterostructures to enhance tribo-piezoelectric effects for nanogenerator applications.
Findings
MoS/WTe and MoTe/WS heterostructures show promise for energy harvesting.
MoS/IrO and MoS/TiO are unsuitable due to high current flow.
Strain enhances charge transfer and orbital contributions in certain heterostructures.
Abstract
Two-dimensional transition metal dichalcogenides (TMDs) are highly promising candidates for various applications due to their unique electrical, optical, mechanical, and chemical properties. Furthermore, heterostructures consisting of TMDs with metals, oxides, and conductive materials have attracted significant research interest due to their exceptional electronic properties. In this study, we utilized density functional theory to investigate those electronic and transport properties, which are relevant for the application of tribo-piezoelectricity in creating novel nanogenerators: an interdisciplinary approach with promising implications. The results of the study demonstrate that the enhancement of charge transfer between layers and the orbital contribution to the Fermi level under applied strain in MoS/IrO, MoS/TiO, MoS/WTe, and MoTe/WS heterostructures is noteworthy. Additionally,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced Sensor and Energy Harvesting Materials · Advanced Materials and Mechanics · Conducting polymers and applications
