ZnO@C/PVDF Electrospun Membrane as Piezoelectric Nanogenerator for Wearable Applications
Anshika Bagla, Kaliyan Hembram, Fran\c{c}ois Rault, Fabien Sala\"un,, Subramanian Sundarrajan, Seeram Ramakrishna, Supratim Mitra

TL;DR
This study develops a lightweight, breathable, and waterproof ZnO@C/PVDF electrospun membrane that functions as an efficient piezoelectric nanogenerator for wearable energy harvesting, combining enhanced performance with comfort.
Contribution
It introduces a novel ZnO@C/PVDF membrane fabricated via electrospinning with improved piezoelectric performance and waterproof, breathable properties for wearable devices.
Findings
Maximum power density of 384.83 μW/cm³ achieved.
ZnO@C nanorods outperform nanoparticles in voltage output.
Membrane exhibits high breathability and waterproofness.
Abstract
The rapid growth of wearable technology demands sustainable, flexible, and lightweight energy sources for various applications ranging from health monitoring to electronic textiles. Although wearable devices based on the piezoelectric effect are widespread, achieving simultaneous breathability, waterproof, and enhanced piezoelectric performance remains challenging. Herein, this study aims to develop a piezoelectric nanogenerator (PENG) using ZnO nanofillers in two morphologies (nanoparticles and nanorods), with a carbon coating (ZnO@C) core-cell structure to enhance piezoelectric performance. Electrospinning technique was employed to fabricate a lightweight, breathable, and water-resistant ZnO@C/PVDF membrane, enabling in situ electrical poling and mechanical stretching to enhance electroactive \b{eta}-phase formation and thus improve piezoelectric performance. A maximum power density…
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