Enhancing the interyarn friction properties of kevlar and glass fabrics through ZnO nanowire coating

2020 ◽  
pp. 002199832096741
Author(s):  
S Gowthaman ◽  
Dileep R Sekhar

The interyarn friction properties of fabrics can be enhanced by appropriate surface treatment of fibers. This study focuses on evaluating the interyarn friction properties of Kevlar and Glass fabrics that were coated with ZnO nanowires through different growth cycles. ZnO nanowires were coated onto woven Kevlar and Glass fabrics through a low temperature hydrothermal solution method. Longer growth time coupled with periodic refreshing of growth solution and washing of fabrics was found to be a favorable condition for uniform and precipitate free growth of ZnO nanowires. The effects of ZnO nanowire coating on the tensile and interyarn friction properties of fabrics were measured. In general, after ZnO nanowire coatings, Kevlar fabrics remained equally flexible as that of bare fabric while Glass fabrics became relatively stiff and brittle. The interyarn friction properties of Kevlar fabrics were found to be high under 100 N transverse tension while the transverse tension was found to have negligible or insignificant effect on the interyarn friction properties of Glass fabrics that were used in this research. Compared to bare fabric, Kevlar fabric coated with ZnO nanowires for extended duration showed 266% and 293% increase in yarn pull out load and energy, respectively under 100 N tension. Compared to bare fabric, Glass fabric coated with ZnO nanowires for extended duration showed 517% and 376% increase in yarn pull out load and energy, respectively under 5 N tension. These significant improvements in interyarn friction properties were attributed to mechanical interlocking and accumulation of ZnO nanowires at the intersection of yarns.

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Mohsen Maddah

<p>Microelectrode arrays (MEAs) have been shown as a successful approach for neuroscientists to monitor the signal communication within the neuronal networks for understanding the functionality of the nervous system. However, using conventional planar MEAs is shown to be incapable of precise signal recording from neuronal networks at single-cell resolution due to low signal-to-ratio (SNR). This thesis looks at developing an electronic platform that comprises of zinc oxide nanowires (ZnO-NWs) on MEAs as a future device to record action potential (AP) signals with high SNR from human neuronal networks at single-cell resolution. Specifically, I studied the controlled growth of ZnO nanowires with various morphologies at exact locations across the substrate. I then investigated the biocompatibility of ZnO nanowires with different morphology and geometry for interaction with human NTera2.D1 (hNT) neurons. Finally, I examined the electrical characteristics of MEAs that were integrated with ZnO nanowires and metal encapsulated ZnO nanowires in comparison to the planar MEAs.  The hydrothermal growth of ZnO nanowires is thoroughly investigated as a technique to allow synthesis of the nanowires at a low temperature (95°C) with a low cost and high scalability that can also be applied on flexible substrates. The morphology of the ZnO nanowires was varied (diameters of 20–300 nm, lengths of 0.15–6.2 µm, aspect ratios of 6–95 and densities of 10–285 NWs/µm²) by controlling the critical growth parameters such as the precursor concentration (2.5–150 mM), growth time (1–20 h) and additive polyethylenimine (PEI) concentration (0–8 mM). The diameter and length of the ZnO nanowires were increased by increasing the precursor concentration and growth time. Using the standard precursor concentration of 25 mM, growth times of up to 4 h were found effective for the active growth of the nanowires due to the consumption of the precursor ions and precipitation of ZnO. The addition of 6 mM PEI to the growth solution was shown to mediate the growth solution, allowing the extension of the nanowire growth to 20 h or longer. The PEI molecules were also attached to the lateral faces of the nanowires that confined their lateral growth and promoted their axial growth (enhanced aspect ratio from 12 ± 3 to 67 ± 21).  Standard photolithography techniques were also introduced to selectively grow ZnO nanowires on exact locations across the substrates. The role of the ZnO seed layer geometry, seed layer area and gap, on the growth of ZnO nanowires was also investigated. Despite using the constant growth parameters (25 mM of precursor concentration with 4 h of growth time) changing the seed line widths (4 µm–1 mm) and the gap between the seed lines (2 µm–800 µm) resulted in the morphology of the nanowires to vary across the same substrate (diameters of 50–240 nm, lengths of 1.2–4.6 µm, aspect ratios of 9–34 and densities of 28–120 NWs/µm²). The seed area ratio of 50% was determined as a threshold to influence the nanowire morphology, where decreasing the seed area ratio below 50% (by increasing the adjacent gap or decreasing the seed layer area) increased the growth rate of the nanowires.  The biocompatibility of ZnO nanowires with human hNT neurons was investigated in this work for the first time. The adhesion and growth of hNT neurons on the arrays of ZnO nanowire florets were determined to be influenced by both geometry and morphology of the nanowires. The growth of the hNT neurons was promoted by 30% compared to the control Si/SiO₂ substrate surface when ZnO nanowires with lengths shorter than 500 nm and densities higher than 350 NWs/µm² were grown. The hNT neurons on all nanowires were also demonstrated to be functionally viable as they responded to the glutamate stimulation.  ZnO nanowires were shown to improve the electrical properties of the MEAs by reducing the electrochemical impedance due to the increased 3D surface area. The ZnO nanowires that were grown with 50 mM of precursor concentration for 4 h of growth time lowered the impedance from 835 ± 40 kΩ of planar Cr/Au MEAs to 540 ± 20 kΩ at a frequency of 1 kHz. In contrast, the ZnO nanowires that were grown with PEI for 35 h showed that despite the increased surface area by a factor of 45× the impedance was found to be quite high, 2.25 ± 0.2 MΩ at 1 kHz of frequency. The adsorption of PEI molecules to the lateral surfaces of the nanowires was thought to behave as a passivation layer that could have restricted the charge transfer characteristics of the ZnO-NW MEAs.  Encapsulation of the pristine ZnO nanowires that were grown with standard precursor concentration of 25 mM for 4 h of growth time with different metallic layers (Cr/Au, Ti and Pt) further improved the electrical characteristics of the MEAs. The ZnO nanowires that were encapsulated with a 10 nm thin layer of Ti and Pt achieved the lowest electrochemical impedance of 400 ± 25 kΩ at 1 kHz in this work. The robustness of the Ti encapsulated ZnO nanowires were also improved in comparison to the PEI ZnO nanowires. The improved electrochemical characteristics and mechanical stability of the MEAs integrated with metal encapsulated ZnO nanowires have shown a great promise for improving the SNR of recording signals from neuronal cells for long term measurements.  This work concludes that both pristine ZnO nanowire MEAs and metal encapsulated ZnO nanowire MEAs will be capable of recording AP signals from human neuronal networks at single-cell resolution. However, further optimisation and extensions of the work are required to record AP signals from human neuronal cells.</p>


Author(s):  
Ebonee A. Walker ◽  
Roberto Aga ◽  
Richard Mu

Hybrid nanocomposites, such as ZnO nanowires embedded in conducting polymers, are very attractive for chemical sensing applications. Previous studies have shown that tuning ZnO nanowire concentration with respect to the polymer can be employed to tailor chemical sensitivity and selectivity. In this work, we investigate the effect of ZnO nanowire growth time on the electrical transport properties of sensors with and without the polymer matrix. Varying growth times may affect wire lengths, wire concentration, as well as wire interconnectivity. Using pure Zn as the source, ZnO nanowires are grown on a glass substrate by a low temperature thermal evaporation method. Poly(3-hexylthiophene) is employed as the polymeric matrix to form a hybrid structure. The response to ethanol vapor of sensors with different nanowire growth times is evaluated.


2013 ◽  
Vol 718-720 ◽  
pp. 132-135
Author(s):  
Li Hsiang Wang ◽  
Su Hua Yang ◽  
Yi Ming Hsh ◽  
Ming Yu Chang ◽  
Ting Jen Hsueh

This experiment applied the vapor transport method and the AZO catalyst, and successfully grew ZnO nanowires on silicon substrate. The results showed that the factors such as the position of growth substrate, temperature, temperature rising rate, growth time, gas flow volume, and the proportion of ZnO and carbon composition powder, could decide the quality and characteristics of ZnO nanowire. Optimal conditions for ZnO nanowire growth were: carbon and ZnO powders mixed at a 1:1 weight ratio to serve as the material for growing nanowires, located at a distance of 10 cm from the silicon substrate which already had AZO thin film deposed on it; the growth temperature was set at 1100°C for a continuous duration of 70 minutes; the flow volumes of the nitrogen and oxygen gases within the furnace pipe were 70 and 60 sccm, and the furnace pipe temperature rising rate was 20°C/min. In addition, it was observed by FE-SEM that when the substrate was away from the source material by 10 cm, there was nanowire with the radius of 0.11μm and length of 9.3μm. By X-ray we found the characteristic wave summit of ZnO with lattice parameter a = 0.3249 nm and c = 0.5206 nm, was in fine single crystal structure and the directions were all in (002).In field emission measurements, when the current densities was 0.1μA/cm2, the lower initial electric fields corresponding to it was 0.11 V/μm and had the best field enhancement factor with a value of 1782.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Mohsen Maddah

<p>Microelectrode arrays (MEAs) have been shown as a successful approach for neuroscientists to monitor the signal communication within the neuronal networks for understanding the functionality of the nervous system. However, using conventional planar MEAs is shown to be incapable of precise signal recording from neuronal networks at single-cell resolution due to low signal-to-ratio (SNR). This thesis looks at developing an electronic platform that comprises of zinc oxide nanowires (ZnO-NWs) on MEAs as a future device to record action potential (AP) signals with high SNR from human neuronal networks at single-cell resolution. Specifically, I studied the controlled growth of ZnO nanowires with various morphologies at exact locations across the substrate. I then investigated the biocompatibility of ZnO nanowires with different morphology and geometry for interaction with human NTera2.D1 (hNT) neurons. Finally, I examined the electrical characteristics of MEAs that were integrated with ZnO nanowires and metal encapsulated ZnO nanowires in comparison to the planar MEAs.  The hydrothermal growth of ZnO nanowires is thoroughly investigated as a technique to allow synthesis of the nanowires at a low temperature (95°C) with a low cost and high scalability that can also be applied on flexible substrates. The morphology of the ZnO nanowires was varied (diameters of 20–300 nm, lengths of 0.15–6.2 µm, aspect ratios of 6–95 and densities of 10–285 NWs/µm²) by controlling the critical growth parameters such as the precursor concentration (2.5–150 mM), growth time (1–20 h) and additive polyethylenimine (PEI) concentration (0–8 mM). The diameter and length of the ZnO nanowires were increased by increasing the precursor concentration and growth time. Using the standard precursor concentration of 25 mM, growth times of up to 4 h were found effective for the active growth of the nanowires due to the consumption of the precursor ions and precipitation of ZnO. The addition of 6 mM PEI to the growth solution was shown to mediate the growth solution, allowing the extension of the nanowire growth to 20 h or longer. The PEI molecules were also attached to the lateral faces of the nanowires that confined their lateral growth and promoted their axial growth (enhanced aspect ratio from 12 ± 3 to 67 ± 21).  Standard photolithography techniques were also introduced to selectively grow ZnO nanowires on exact locations across the substrates. The role of the ZnO seed layer geometry, seed layer area and gap, on the growth of ZnO nanowires was also investigated. Despite using the constant growth parameters (25 mM of precursor concentration with 4 h of growth time) changing the seed line widths (4 µm–1 mm) and the gap between the seed lines (2 µm–800 µm) resulted in the morphology of the nanowires to vary across the same substrate (diameters of 50–240 nm, lengths of 1.2–4.6 µm, aspect ratios of 9–34 and densities of 28–120 NWs/µm²). The seed area ratio of 50% was determined as a threshold to influence the nanowire morphology, where decreasing the seed area ratio below 50% (by increasing the adjacent gap or decreasing the seed layer area) increased the growth rate of the nanowires.  The biocompatibility of ZnO nanowires with human hNT neurons was investigated in this work for the first time. The adhesion and growth of hNT neurons on the arrays of ZnO nanowire florets were determined to be influenced by both geometry and morphology of the nanowires. The growth of the hNT neurons was promoted by 30% compared to the control Si/SiO₂ substrate surface when ZnO nanowires with lengths shorter than 500 nm and densities higher than 350 NWs/µm² were grown. The hNT neurons on all nanowires were also demonstrated to be functionally viable as they responded to the glutamate stimulation.  ZnO nanowires were shown to improve the electrical properties of the MEAs by reducing the electrochemical impedance due to the increased 3D surface area. The ZnO nanowires that were grown with 50 mM of precursor concentration for 4 h of growth time lowered the impedance from 835 ± 40 kΩ of planar Cr/Au MEAs to 540 ± 20 kΩ at a frequency of 1 kHz. In contrast, the ZnO nanowires that were grown with PEI for 35 h showed that despite the increased surface area by a factor of 45× the impedance was found to be quite high, 2.25 ± 0.2 MΩ at 1 kHz of frequency. The adsorption of PEI molecules to the lateral surfaces of the nanowires was thought to behave as a passivation layer that could have restricted the charge transfer characteristics of the ZnO-NW MEAs.  Encapsulation of the pristine ZnO nanowires that were grown with standard precursor concentration of 25 mM for 4 h of growth time with different metallic layers (Cr/Au, Ti and Pt) further improved the electrical characteristics of the MEAs. The ZnO nanowires that were encapsulated with a 10 nm thin layer of Ti and Pt achieved the lowest electrochemical impedance of 400 ± 25 kΩ at 1 kHz in this work. The robustness of the Ti encapsulated ZnO nanowires were also improved in comparison to the PEI ZnO nanowires. The improved electrochemical characteristics and mechanical stability of the MEAs integrated with metal encapsulated ZnO nanowires have shown a great promise for improving the SNR of recording signals from neuronal cells for long term measurements.  This work concludes that both pristine ZnO nanowire MEAs and metal encapsulated ZnO nanowire MEAs will be capable of recording AP signals from human neuronal networks at single-cell resolution. However, further optimisation and extensions of the work are required to record AP signals from human neuronal cells.</p>


2009 ◽  
Vol 5 (4) ◽  
pp. 479-484 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. Sangpour ◽  
M. Roozbehi ◽  
O. Akhavan ◽  
A. Moshfegh
Keyword(s):  

2015 ◽  
Vol 3 (12) ◽  
pp. 6330-6339 ◽  
Author(s):  
Haiyun Huang ◽  
Pengcheng Xu ◽  
Dan Zheng ◽  
Chuanzhao Chen ◽  
Xinxin Li

This study presents a novel sulfuration–desulfuration sensing effect of an intrinsic (i.e., uncatalyzed) ZnO nanowire array for trace-level detection of H2S. The novel H2S sensing mechanism is clarified by specifically designed experiments, material characterization and theoretical analysis.


2009 ◽  
Vol 08 (03) ◽  
pp. 285-287 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. ESKANDARI ◽  
V. AHMADI ◽  
Sh. AHMADI

In this study, ZnO nanowires are synthesized via ZnO nanorods at low temperature by using zinc acetate dehydrate and polyvinylpyrrolidone as precursor and capping, respectively. We use chemical solution method for synthesis of ZnO nanowires. Samples are characterized by means of scanning electron microscopy and X-ray diffraction. First, the nanorods are prepared at 300°C temperature, and then they are put into the furnace under air atmosphere at 450°C for 2 h. It is observed that nanowires with 20 nm diameter are produced. Photoluminescence spectra of nanorods and nanowires are compared. It shows that intensity of ultraviolet peak in the nanowires decreases but in contrast the intensity of green emission part increases. This is because, the surface effects such as oxygen vacancies increase in the structures of ZnO .


Nanoscale ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 12 (3) ◽  
pp. 1455-1463 ◽  
Author(s):  
Heng Cui ◽  
Qing Liu ◽  
Rui Li ◽  
Xiaoyun Wei ◽  
Yue Sun ◽  
...  

We constructed ZnO-coated gear structure PDMS pillars microchips that simultaneously combine the advantages of a micro/nano-structure. The microchip is designed to sensitively capture and non-destructively release CTCs using ZnO nanowires.


2012 ◽  
Vol 1406 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. Karaagac ◽  
M. Parlak ◽  
M. Saif Islam

ABSTRACTVertically oriented, highly dense ZnO nanowires (NWs) array was successfully grown on both glass and silicon substrates using hydrothermal technique. A systematic study was carried out to investigate the effects of growth parameters including growth time and thickness of ZnO seed layer on the quality of ZnO NWs in terms of their homogeneity and orientation in the vertical direction. The diameter as well as the length of grown ZnO NWs was found to be closely dependent on the thickness of the pre-coated ZnO seed layer. The structures of ZnO NWs and electron-beam evaporated AgGa0.5In0.5Se2 (AGIS) thin film have been characterized by X-ray diffraction measurements and optical properties were measured by transmission measurement. The optic band gap of AGIS thin film was found to be almost optimum (1.56 eV) to match the abundant part of solar cell spectrum. AGIS thin film was deposited on the synthesized ZnO NWs to form p-n heterojunction based inorganic solar cell, which exhibited photovoltaic behavior with a power conversion efficiency of 0.37 % under A.M (1.5) illumination.


Rare Metals ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 30 (6) ◽  
pp. 676-680 ◽  
Author(s):  
Weiguang Yang ◽  
Yali Wang ◽  
Qiang Zhen ◽  
Weimin Shi

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