Abstract

Zinc oxide (ZnO) nanowires (NWs) are excellent candidates for the fabrication of energy harvesters, mechanical sensors, and piezotronic and piezophototronic devices. In order to integrate ZnO NWs into flexible devices, low-temperature fabrication methods are required that do not damage the plastic substrate. To date, the deposition of patterned ceramic thin films on flexible substrates is a difficult task to perform under vacuum-free conditions. Printing methods to deposit functional thin films offer many advantages, such as a low cost, low temperature, high throughput, and patterning at the same stage of deposition. Among printing techniques, gravure-based techniques are among the most attractive due to their ability to produce high quality results at high speeds and perform deposition over a large area. In this paper, we explore gravure printing as a cost-effective high-quality method to deposit thin ZnO seed layers on flexible polymer substrates. For the first time, we show that by following a chemical bath deposition (CBD) process, ZnO nanowires may be grown over gravure-printed ZnO nanoparticle seed layers. Piezo-response force microscopy (PFM) reveals the presence of a homogeneous distribution of Zn-polar domains in the NWs, and, by use of the data, the piezoelectric coefficient is estimated to be close to 4 pm/V. The overall results demonstrate that gravure printing is an appropriate method to deposit seed layers at a low temperature and to undertake the direct fabrication of flexible piezoelectric transducers that are based on ZnO nanowires. This work opens the possibility of manufacturing completely vacuum-free solution-based flexible piezoelectric devices.

Highlights

  • IntroductionZinc oxide (ZnO) NWs have been widely used in different applications related to the conversion of mechanical energy into electricity at the nanometric scale

  • Our experimental results show that gravure printing is a promising lowtemperature Zinc oxide (ZnO) seeding method, especially from the perspective of fabricating flexible piezoelectric devices

  • Study of the printed seed layer morphology revealed that the nanoparticulate allowed a better growth of vertical ZnO NWs by chemical bath deposition (CBD) with respect to the sintered one because the high-energy NPs provided a higher number of nucleation sites

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Summary

Introduction

ZnO NWs have been widely used in different applications related to the conversion of mechanical energy into electricity at the nanometric scale. Some advantages of these NWs, compared to the bulk counterpart, are the ability to withstand high deformation values without fracturing [15,16,17], high values for the Young’s modulus [18,19], and high values for the piezoelectric coefficient [20], as well as a high surface-to-volume ratio that allows enhanced piezoelectric responses thanks to Fermi-level pinning [21]

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