Abstract
Piezoelectric nanogenerators (PENG) with flexible and simple design have pronounced significance in fabricating sustainable devices for self-powering electronics. This study demonstrates the fabrication of electrospun nanocomposite fibers from polyvinylidene fluoride (PVDF) filled Zinc Oxide (ZnO)/Iron Oxide (FeO) nanomaterials. The nanocomposite fiber based flexible PENG showed piezoelectric output voltage of 5.9 V when 3 wt.% of ZnO/FeO hybrid nanomaterial was introduced, which was 29.5 times higher than the neat PVDF. No apparent decline in output voltage was observed for almost 2000 seconds attributed to the outstanding durability. This higher piezoelectric output performance is correlated with the β-phase transformation studies from the Fourier transformation infrared spectroscopy and the crystallinity studies from the differential scanning calorimetry. Both these studies show respective enhancement of 3.79 and 2.16 % in the β-phase crystallinity values of PVDF-ZnO/FeO 3 wt.% composite. Higher dielectric constant value obtained for the same composite (3 times higher than the neat PVDF) confirms the increased energy storage efficiency as well. Thus the proposed soft and flexible PENG is a promising mechanical energy harvester, and its good dielectric properties reveals the ability to use this material as good power sources for wearable and flexible electronic devices.