
Nanowire generates power by harvesting energy from the environment
Date: Thursday, September 27, 2007 @ 19:40:23 UTC Topic: Science
As the sizes of sensor networks and mobile devices shrink toward the
microscale, and even nanoscale, there is a growing need for suitable
power sources. Because even the tiniest battery is too big to be used
in nanoscale devices, scientists are exploring nanosize systems that
can salvage energy from the environment.
Now, researchers at the University of Illinois
have shown that a single nanowire can produce power by harvesting
mechanical energy. Made of piezoelectric material, the nanowire
generates a voltage when mechanically deformed. To measure the voltage
produced by such a tiny wire, however, the researchers first had to
build an extremely sensitive and precise mechanical testing stage.
“With the development of this precision testing apparatus, we
successfully demonstrated the first controlled measurement of voltage
generation from an individual nanowire,” said Min-Feng Yu, a professor
of mechanical science and engineering, and a researcher at the
university’s Beckman Institute. “The new testing apparatus makes
possible other difficult, but important, measurements, as well.”
Yu and graduate students Zhaoyu Wang, Jie Hu, Abhijit Suryavanshi
and Kyungsuk Yum describe the measurement, and the measurement device,
in a paper accepted for publication in the journal Nano Letters, and posted on the journal’s Web site.
The nanowire was synthesized in the form of a single crystal of
barium titanate, an oxide of barium and titanium used as a
piezoelectric material in microphones and transducers, and was
approximately 280 nanometers in diameter and 15 microns long.
The precision tensile mechanical testing stage is a finger-size
device consisting of two coplanar platforms – one movable and one
stationary – separated by a 3-micron gap. The movable platform is
driven by a single-axis piezoelectric flexure stage with a displacement
resolution better than 1 nanometer.
When the researchers’
piezoelectric nanowire was placed across the gap and fastened to the
two platforms, the movable platform induced mechanical vibrations in
the nanowire. The voltage generated by the nanowire was recorded by
high-sensitivity, charge-sensing electronics.
“The electrical energy produced by the nanowire for each
vibrational cycle was 0.3 attojoules (less than one quintillionth of a
joule),” Yu said. “Accurate measurements this small could not be made
on nanowires before.”
While the researchers created mechanical deformations in the
nanowire through vibrations caused by external motion, other vibrations
in the environment,
such as sound waves, should also induce deformations. The researchers’
next step is to accurately measure the piezoelectric nanowire’s
response to those acoustic vibrations.
“In addition, because of the fine precision offered by the
mechanical testing stage, it should also be possible to quantitatively
compare the intrinsic properties of the nanowire to those of the bulk
material,” Yu said. “This will allow us to study the scale effect
related to electromechanical coupling in nanoscale systems.”
Source: University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Via: http://www.physorg.com/news110115319.html
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