“The fiber-based nanogenerator  would be a simple and economical way to harvest energy from physical movement,”  said Zhong Lin Wang, a Regents professor in the School of Materials Science and  Engineering at the Georgia Institute of Technology. “If we can combine many of  these fibers in double or triple layers in clothing, we could provide a  flexible, foldable and wearable power source that, for example, would allow  people to generate their own electrical current while walking.”
The  research was sponsored by the National Science Foundation, the U.S. Departm
ent  of Energy and the Emory-Georgia Tech Nanotechnology Center for Personalized and  Predictive Oncology.
The microfiber-nanowire hybrid system builds on the  nanowire nanogenerator that Wang’s research team announced in the journal  Science in April 2007. That system generates current from arrays of  vertically-aligned zinc oxide (ZnO) nanowires that flex beneath an electrode  containing conductive platinum tips. The nanowire nanogenerator was designed to  harness energy from environmental sources such as ultrasonic waves, mechanical  vibrations or blood flow.
Microscope image shows the fibers that are part of the
microfiber nanogenerator. The top one is coated with gold.
(Image courtesy Zhong  Lin Wang and Xudong Wang).
The nanogenerators developed by Wang’s research group take advantage of the unique coupled piezoelectric and semiconducting properties of zinc oxide nanostructures, which produce small electrical charges when they are flexed. After a year ofdevelopment, the original nanogenerators – which are two by three millimeters square – can produce up to 800 nanoamperes and 20 millivolt.
The microfiber generators rely on the same principles, but are made from  soft materials and designed to capture energy from low-frequency mechanical  energy. They consist of DuPont Kevlar fibers on which zinc oxide nanowires have  been grown radially and embedded in a polymer at their roots, creating what  appear to be microscopic baby-bottle brushes with billions of bristles. One of  the fibers in each pair is also coated with gold to serve as the electrode and  to deflect the nanowire tips.
“The two fibers scrub together just like  two bottle brushes with their bristles touching, and the  piezoelectric-semiconductor process converts the mechanical motion into  electrical energy,” Wang explained. “Many of these devices could be put together  to produce higher power output.”
Wang and collaborators Xudong Wang and  Yong Qin have made more than 200 of the fiber nanogenerators. Each is tested on  an apparatus that uses a spring and wheel to move one fiber against the other.  The fibers are rubbed together for up to 30 minutes to test their durability and  power production.
Schematic shows how pairs of fibers would
generate electrical  current.
So far, the researchers have measured current of about four nanoamperes and  output voltage of about four millivolts from a nanogenerator that included two  fibers that were each one centimeter long. With a much improved design, Wang  estimates that a square meter of fabric made from the special fibers could  theoretically generate as much as 80 milliwatts of power.
Fabrication of  the microfiber nanogenerator begins with coating a 100-nanometer seed layer of  zinc oxide onto the Kevlar using magnetron sputtering. The fibers are then  immersed in a reactant solution for approximately 12 hours, which causes  nanowires to grow from the seed layer at a temperature of 80 degrees Celsius.  The growth produces uniform coverage of the fibers, with typical lengths of  about 3.5 microns and several hundred nanometers between each fiber.
To  help maintain the nanowires’ connection to the Kevlar, the researchers apply two  layers of tetraethoxysilane (TEOS) to the fiber. “First we coat the fiber with  the polymer, then with a zinc oxide layer,” Wang explained. “Then we grow the  nanowires and re-infiltrate the fiber with the polymer. This helps to avoid  scrubbing off the nanowires when the fibers rub together.”
Finally, the  researchers apply a 300 nanometer layer of gold to some of the nanowire-covered  Kevlar. The two different fibers are then paired up and entangled to ensure that  a gold-coated fiber contacts a fiber covered only with zinc oxide nanowires. The  gold fibers serve as a Shottky barrier with the zinc oxide, substituting for the  platinum-tipped electrode used in the original nanogenerator.
To ensure  that the current they measured was produced by the piezoelectric-semiconductor  effect and not just static electricity, the researchers conducted several tests.  They tried rubbing gold fibers together, and zinc oxide fibers together, neither  of which produced current. They also reversed the polarity of the connections,  which changed the output current and voltage.
By allowing nanowire  growth to take place at temperatures as low as 80 degrees Celsius, the new  fabrication technique would allow the nanostructures to be grown on virtually  any shape or substrate.
As a next step, the researchers want to combine  multiple fiber pairs to increase the current and voltage levels. They also plan  to improve conductance of their fibers.
However, one significant  challenge lies head for the power shirt – washing it. Zinc oxide is sensitive to  moisture, so in real shirts or jackets, the nanowires would have to be protected  from the effects of the washing machine, Wang noted.
The research is  supported by the NSF’s Division of Materials Research through grant 0706436.  “This multi-disciplinary research grant enables materials scientists and  engineers from varied backgrounds to work together toward translating basic and  applied research into viable technologies,” noted Harsh Deep Chopra, NSF’s  program manager.







 
 




