Abstract

The near-room temperature thermoelectric properties of self-assembling ZnO nanowire networks before and after encapsulation in nonconductive polymers are studied. ZnO nanowire networks were synthesized via a two-step fabrication technique involving the deposition of metallic Zn networks by thermal evaporation, followed by thermal oxidation. Synthesized ZnO nanowire networks were encapsulated in polyvinyl alcohol (PVA) or commercially available epoxy adhesive. Comparison of electrical resistance and Seebeck coefficient of the ZnO nanowire networks before and after encapsulation showed a significant increase in the network's electrical conductivity accompanied by the increase of its Seebeck coefficient after the encapsulation. The thermoelectric power factor (PF) of the encapsulated ZnO nanowire networks exceeded the PF of bare ZnO networks by ~ 5 and ~ 185 times for PVA- and epoxy-encapsulated samples, respectively, reaching 0.85 μW m−1 K−2 and ZT ~ 3·10–6 at room temperature, which significantly exceeded the PF and ZT values for state-of-the-art non-conductive polymers based thermoelectric flexible films. Mechanisms underlying the improvement of the thermoelectrical properties of ZnO nanowire networks due to their encapsulation are discussed. In addition, encapsulated ZnO nanowire networks showed excellent stability during 100 repetitive bending cycles down to a 5 mm radius, which makes them perspective for the application in flexible thermoelectrics.

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