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1.
Nano Lett ; 22(23): 9586-9595, 2022 Dec 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36394382

ABSTRACT

Perovskite nanopillars (PNPs) are propitious candidates for solar irradiation harvesting and are potential alternatives to thin films in flexible photovoltaics. To realize efficient daily energy output, photovoltaics must absorb sunlight over a broad range of incident angles and wavelengths congruent with the solar spectrum. Herein, we report highly periodic three-dimensional (3D) PNP-based flexible photovoltaics possessing a core-shell structure. The vertically aligned PNP arrays demonstrate up to 95.70% and 75.10% absorption at peak and under an incident angle of 60°. The efficient absorption and the orthogonal carrier collection facilitate an external quantum efficiency of 84.0%-89.18% for broadband wavelength. PNPs have been successfully implemented in flexible solar cells. The porous alumina membrane protects PNPs against water and oxygen intrusion and thereby imparts robustness to photovoltaic devices. Meanwhile, the excellent tolerance to mechanical stress/strain enables our unique PNP-based device to provide efficient solar-to-electricity conversion while undergoing mechanical bending.

2.
Electrophoresis ; 38(8): 1105-1112, 2017 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28306173

ABSTRACT

Electrically induced structure formation, as a physical approach to fabricate micro/nanostructures, has attracted much attention because of the simple process, low-cost, high-efficiency, and wide applications on electronics, microfluidics, and so forth. Hitherto, the influence of some process parameters, such as voltage, air gap, film thickness, polymer properties, on the polymeric behavior, and the structure formation has been explored, neglecting the effects of the template features, which affect the polymer deformation. Especially for the conductive protrusions directly contacting the polymer, the phenomenon of electric breakdown may occur, leading to a failure of structure formation. The limitation of the research on the template features triggers the necessity to study its influence for a faithful deformation. In this paper, three types of patterned template are studied based on the electric field at the air-polymer interface, consisting of completely conductive template, partially conductive template, and dielectric template. Comprehensive consideration of the electric intensity for a sufficient driving pressure and the leaky current for preventing damaging the polymer, some guiding opinions on the template material and geometry can be provided to design the patterned template for the electrically induced structure formation process with a purpose for a faithful structure.


Subject(s)
Equipment Design/methods , Nanostructures/ultrastructure , Electricity , Electronics/instrumentation , Microfluidics/instrumentation , Polymers
3.
Soft Matter ; 11(41): 8105-12, 2015 Nov 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26332897

ABSTRACT

We propose a novel low-frequency strategy to trap 10 µm colloidal polystyrene (PS) particles of small buoyancy velocity on the surface of a floating electrode, on the basis of combined induced-charge electroosmotic (ICEO) flow and dipole-dipole chaining phenomenon. For field frequencies of 5-50 Hz, much lower than the reciprocal RC time scale, double-layer polarization makes electric field lines pass around the 'insulating' surface of the ideally polarizable floating electrode. Once the long-range ICEO convective micro-vortexes transport particles quickly from the bulk fluid to the electrode surface, neighbouring particles aligned along the local horizontal electric field attract one another by attractive dipolar interactions, and form arrays of particle chains that are almost parallel with the applied electric field. Most importantly, this low-frequency trapping method takes advantage of the dielectrophoretic (DEP) particle-particle interaction to enhance the downward buoyancy force of this dipolar chaining assembly structure, in order to overcome the upward ICEO fluidic drag and realize stable particle trapping around the flow stagnation region. For the sake of comparison, the field frequency is further raised far above the DC limit. At the intermediate frequencies of 200 Hz-2 kHz, this trapping method fails to work, since the normal electric field component emanates from the conducting electrode surface. Besides, at high field frequencies (>3 kHz), particles can be once again effectively trapped at the electrode center, though with a compact (3 kHz) or disordered (10 kHz) 2D packing state on the electrode surface and mainly governed by the short-range negative DEP force field, resulting in requiring a much longer trapping time. To gain a better interpretation of the various particle behaviours observed in experiments, we develop a theoretical framework that takes into account both Maxwell-Wagner interfacial charge relaxation at the particle/electrolyte interface and the field-induced double-layer polarization at the electrode/electrolyte interface, and apply it to quantify the particle-particle electrokinetic interactions. With this simple geometrical configuration of a floating electrode, our results provide a new way to realize trapping of colloidal particles with a small buoyancy velocity under the combined action of ICEO flow and an attractive dipole-dipole interaction.

4.
Langmuir ; 30(42): 12654-63, 2014 Oct 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25268463

ABSTRACT

Electrically induced structure formation (EISF) is an interesting and unique approach for generating a microstructured duplicate from a rheological polymer by a spatially modulated electric field induced by a patterned template. Most of the research on EISF have so far used various dielectric polymers (with an electrical conductivity smaller than 10(-10) S/m that can be considered a perfect dielectric), on which the electric field induces a Maxwell stress only due to the dipoles (or bounded charges) in the polymer molecules, leading to a structure with a small aspect ratio. This paper presents a different approach for improving the aspect ratio allowed in EISF by doping organic salt into the perfect dielectric polymer, i.e., turning the perfect dielectric into a leaky dielectric, considering the fact that the free space charges enriched in the leaky dielectric polymer can make an additional contribution to the Maxwell stress, i.e., electrohydrodynamic pressure, which is desirable for high aspect ratio structuring. Our numerical simulations and experimental tests have shown that a leaky dielectric polymer, with a small conductivity comparable to that of deionized water, can be much more effective at being electrohydrodynamically deformed into a high aspect ratio in comparison with a perfect dielectric polymer when both of them have roughly the same dielectric constant.

5.
ScientificWorldJournal ; 2014: 840497, 2014.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24723831

ABSTRACT

Electrohydrodynamic patterning of arbitrary patterns is achieved by optimizing the critical parameters (applied voltage and spacer height). The applied voltage has a great influence on the fidelity of L-shaped line structures with different sizes. The L-shaped line structures with high fidelity are obtained by using the moderate applied voltage. The spacer height has a great influence on the fidelity of square structures with different sizes. The square structures with high fidelity are obtained by using the low height spacer. The multi-field coupling transient finite element simulation demonstrates that the lack of polymer owing to the high height spacer leads to the formation of defects.


Subject(s)
Polymers/chemistry , Ultraviolet Rays , Electricity
6.
ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ; 16(4): 5028-5035, 2024 Jan 31.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38235664

ABSTRACT

Artificial vision systems (AVS) have potential applications in visual prosthetics and artificially intelligent robotics, and they require a preprocessor and a processor to mimic human vision. Halide perovskite (HP) is a promising preprocessor and processor due to its excellent photoresponse, ubiquitous charge migration pathways, and innate hysteresis. However, the material instability associated with HP thin films hinders their utilization in physical AVSs. Herein, we have developed ultrahigh-density arrays of robust HP nanowires (NWs) rooted in a porous alumina membrane (PAM) as the active layer for an AVS. The NW devices exhibit gradual photocurrent change, responding to changes in light pulse duration, intensity, and number, and allow contrast enhancement of visual inputs with a device lifetime of over 5 months. The NW-based processor possesses temporally stable conductance states with retention >105 s and jitter <10%. The physical AVS demonstrated 100% accuracy in recognizing different shapes, establishing HP as a reliable material for neuromorphic vision systems.

7.
Sci Adv ; 10(20): eadn1095, 2024 May 17.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38748790

ABSTRACT

Fiber light-emitting diodes (Fi-LEDs), which can be used for wearable lighting and display devices, are one of the key components for fiber/textile electronics. However, there exist a number of impediments to overcome on device fabrication with fiber-like substrates, as well as on device encapsulations. Here, we uniformly grew all-inorganic perovskite quantum wire arrays by filling high-density alumina nanopores on the surface of Al fibers with a dip-coating process. With a two-step evaporation method to coat a surrounding transporting layer and semitransparent electrode, we successfully fabricated full-color Fi-LEDs with emission peaks at 625 nanometers (red), 512 nanometers (green), and 490 nanometers (sky-blue), respectively. Intriguingly, additional polydimethylsiloxane packaging helps instill the mechanical bendability, stretchability, and waterproof feature of Fi-LEDs. The plasticity of Al fiber also allows the one-dimensional architecture Fi-LED to be shaped and constructed for two-dimensional or even three-dimensional architectures, opening up a new vista for advanced lighting with unconventional formfactors.

8.
Adv Mater ; 36(24): e2311106, 2024 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38388858

ABSTRACT

Electrochemical biosensors have emerged as one of the promising tools for tracking human body physiological dynamics via non-invasive perspiration analysis. However, it remains a key challenge to integrate multiplexed sensors in a highly controllable and reproducible manner to achieve long-term reliable biosensing, especially on flexible platforms. Herein, a fully inkjet printed and integrated multiplexed biosensing patch with remarkably high stability and sensitivity is reported for the first time. These desirable characteristics are enabled by the unique interpenetrating interface design and precise control over active materials mass loading, owing to the optimized ink formulations and droplet-assisted printing processes. The sensors deliver sensitivities of 313.28 µA mm-1 cm-2 for glucose and 0.87 µA mm-1 cm-2 for alcohol sensing with minimal drift over 30 h, which are among the best in the literature. The integrated patch can be used for reliable and wireless diet monitoring or medical intervention via epidermal analysis and would inspire the advances of wearable devices for intelligent healthcare applications.


Subject(s)
Biosensing Techniques , Glucose , Wearable Electronic Devices , Biosensing Techniques/instrumentation , Biosensing Techniques/methods , Glucose/analysis , Humans , Sweat/chemistry , Sweat/metabolism , Printing , Electrochemical Techniques/methods , Electrochemical Techniques/instrumentation , Ethanol/analysis
9.
Sci Robot ; 9(90): eadi8666, 2024 May 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38748782

ABSTRACT

Garnering inspiration from biological compound eyes, artificial vision systems boasting a vivid range of diverse visual functional traits have come to the fore recently. However, most of these artificial systems rely on transformable electronics, which suffer from the complexity and constrained geometry of global deformation, as well as potential mismatches between optical and detector units. Here, we present a unique pinhole compound eye that combines a three-dimensionally printed honeycomb optical structure with a hemispherical, all-solid-state, high-density perovskite nanowire photodetector array. The lens-free pinhole structure can be designed and fabricated with an arbitrary layout to match the underlying image sensor. Optical simulations and imaging results matched well with each other and substantiated the key characteristics and capabilities of our system, which include an ultrawide field of view, accurate target positioning, and motion tracking function. We further demonstrate the potential of our unique compound eye for advanced robotic vision by successfully completing a moving target tracking mission.

10.
Opt Lett ; 38(14): 2394-6, 2013 Jul 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23939059

ABSTRACT

One economical method for extracting the light loss from both the waveguide mode and substrate is demonstrated. Pillar arrays with different scales are created on the two sides of a silica substrate by inductively coupled plasma etching following a colloidal masking. The quasi-periodic Bragg scattering structure on a silica/ITO interface led to a two-fold current efficiency without introducing a spectral shift or directionality. Meanwhile, the subwavelength-scaled antireflection structure on a silica/air interface produced further increases in efficiency by 40%. The organic light-emitting device directly fabricated on the double-sided nanotextured silica substrate reached an overall enhancement factor of ~2.8 with the current efficiency.

11.
Opt Lett ; 38(16): 3044-6, 2013 Aug 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24104643

ABSTRACT

This Letter proposes a confined laser swelling method to fabricate large curvature microlens arrays. Unlike the polymers in conventional free laser swelling, the swelling polymer, which is methyl red-doped polymethyl methacrylate here, is confined between walls formed by a substrate and a flexible cover layer. Because swelling occurs in an enclosed space, decomposed segments remain in the matrix, resulting in a large hump at the side of the flexible cover layer. The results show that these humps are tens of times higher than those acquired by conventional methods and this method has potential for high efficiency large curvature microlens fabrication.


Subject(s)
Lasers , Lenses , Microtechnology/instrumentation , Polymethyl Methacrylate
12.
Opt Lett ; 38(15): 2720-2, 2013 Aug 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23903122

ABSTRACT

We introduce a strategy to generate uniform illumination. The droplet pinned by a hydrophilic/superhydrophobic heterogeneous surface is oscillated, driven by a laterally placed loudspeaker. The vibrated droplet can be considered as a tunable lens, whose focus and focus length can be real-time tuned. The tunable "lens" is presented as a device for uniform illumination by mechanical manipulation. The incident light is scattered by the vibrated droplet during oscillation, and the irradiance distribution on the image plane becomes larger and more homogenous when the droplet is at resonance.


Subject(s)
Biomimetics , Hydrophobic and Hydrophilic Interactions , Lighting/methods , Vibration , Optical Devices , Surface Properties
13.
Langmuir ; 29(39): 12093-103, 2013 Oct 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23998619

ABSTRACT

Metal nanoparticles in a liquid suspension can be assembled dielectrophoretically (DEP) into nanoparticle chains, which can serve as electrical functional microwires connecting isolated and conductive elements to an electrode pair, as used in wet electronics, bioelectronics, and biochemical sensors. The frequency-dependent morphology of these nanoparticle chains assembled between an electrode pair has even been attributed to the decreasing magnitude of alternating current electroosmosis (ACEO) flow velocity with driving frequency. For instance, highly oriented nanoparticle nanowires can be generated by DEP assembly only at a high frequency, which induces a negligible small ACEO above the electrode surface, corresponding to fewer nanoparticles transported to the assembly region. In this study, attention is focused on the formation of nanoparticle chains in a conductive-island-based microelectrode system. It is worth noting that the intrusion of an island entity can bring about further double-layer polarization and induced charge electroosmosis flow (ICEO) around this conductive object, which exerts a significant influence on DEP assembly. In our experiments, the ends of nanoparticle chains are always extended onto the metal surfaces at 50 kHz, and their central parts become slender at 150 kHz. Meanwhile, wire-shaped particle clusters aligned along the direction of local field lines are more densely distributed at the island rims than that growing from the electrode edges. Consequently, a series of numerical modeling based on the theory of induced charge electrokinetic phenomena are introduced to account for these regular experimental results, including the double-layer charging effect at the metal/electrolyte interface, ACEO, ICEO, and electrothermal flow. Mutual DEP is also treated as an important factor affecting DEP behavior when neighboring particles are approaching one another. The results from the theoretical study are in good agreement with the experimental observations.


Subject(s)
Gold/chemistry , Metal Nanoparticles/chemistry , Electric Conductivity , Electrophoresis , Kinetics , Microelectrodes , Surface Properties
14.
Langmuir ; 29(5): 1351-5, 2013 Feb 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23347355

ABSTRACT

The ability to generate a large area micropillar array with spatially varying heights allows for exploring numerous new interesting applications in biotechnology, surface engineering, microfluidics, and so forth. This Letter presents a clever and straightforward method, called electrically modulated microtransfer molding (EM3), for generating such unique microstructures from a silicon mold arrayed with microholes. The key to the process is an application of electrically tunable wettability caused by a spatially modulated voltage, which electrohydrodynamically drives a photocurable and dielectric prepolymer to fill the microholes to a depth depending on the voltage amplitude. Using EM3, micropillar arrays with stepwise or continuously varying heights are successfully fabricated, with the diameter scalable to 1.5 µm and with the maximum height being equal to the depth of the high-aspect-ratio (more than 10:1) microholes.

15.
Langmuir ; 29(15): 4703-14, 2013 Apr 16.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23506225

ABSTRACT

The electrohydrodynamic patterning of polymer is a unique technique for micro- and nanostructuring where an electric voltage is applied to an electrode pair consisting of a patterned template and a polymer-coated substrate either in contact or separated by an air gap to actuate the deformation of the rheological polymer. Depending on the template composition, three processes were proposed for implementing the EHDP technique and have received a great amount of attention (i.e., electrostatic force-assisted nanoimprint, dielectrophoresis-electrocapillary force-driven imprint, and electrically induced structure formation). A numerical approach, which is versatile for visualizing the full evolution of micro- or nanostructures in these patterning processes or their variants, is a desirable critical tool for optimizing the process variables in industrial applications of this structuring technique. Considering the fact that all of these processes use a dielectric and viscous polymer (behaving mechanically as a liquid) and are carried out in ambient air, this Article presents a generalized formulation for the numerical characterization of the EHDP processes by coupling liquid dielectrophoresis (L-DEP) and the phase field of the air-liquid dual phase. More importantly, some major scale effects, such as the surface tension, contact angle, liquid-solid interface slip, and non-Newtonian viscosity law are introduced, which can impact the accuracy of the numerical results, as shown experimentally by our electrical actuation of a dielectric microdroplet as a test problem. The numerical results are in good agreement with or are well explained by experimental observations published for the three EHDP processes.


Subject(s)
Electrochemical Techniques , Hydrodynamics , Nanostructures/chemistry , Polymers/chemistry , Electrodes , Electrophoresis
16.
Chemosphere ; 313: 137493, 2023 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36502917

ABSTRACT

The immobilization of heavy metal pollutants in river and lake sediments is critical for environmental health and safety. In this study, combined electrokinetic and chemical immobilization were used to remediate Cd and Pb polluted river sediments. The effect of the concentrations of the immobilization reagents and the applied voltage were investigated. Immobilization ratios for Cd and Pb of 98.6% and 84.3%, respectively, was achieved at 7.5 V cm-1 using seven successive rounds of recycling of the immobilization solution of mixed 1.0 g L-1 CO32- and 3.0 g L-1 H2PO4- at the volume ratio of 1:9 with 100 mL immobilization solution to 100 g sediment. The enhancement effect of the electric field is mainly attributed to the increased contact between the immobilization reagents and the heavy metals due to electroosmosis. This study provides a new method for the treatment of heavy metal-polluted sediments.


Subject(s)
Metals, Heavy , Water Pollutants, Chemical , Cadmium , Lead , Geologic Sediments , Environmental Monitoring , Rivers , Water Pollutants, Chemical/analysis , Metals, Heavy/analysis , Risk Assessment , China
17.
Nat Commun ; 14(1): 1972, 2023 04 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37031227

ABSTRACT

Spherical geometry, adaptive optics, and highly dense network of neurons bridging the eye with the visual cortex, are the primary features of human eyes which enable wide field-of-view (FoV), low aberration, excellent adaptivity, and preprocessing of perceived visual information. Therefore, fabricating spherical artificial eyes has garnered enormous scientific interest. However, fusing color vision, in-device preprocessing and optical adaptivity into spherical artificial eyes has always been a tremendous challenge. Herein, we demonstrate a bionic eye comprising tunable liquid crystal optics, and a hemispherical neuromorphic retina with filter-free color vision, enabled by wavelength dependent bidirectional synaptic photo-response in a metal-oxide nanotube/perovskite nanowire hybrid structure. Moreover, by tuning the color selectivity with bias, the device can reconstruct full color images. This work demonstrates a unique approach to address the color vision and optical adaptivity issues associated with artificial eyes that can bring them to a new level approaching their biological counterparts.


Subject(s)
Color Vision , Nanowires , Visual Prosthesis , Humans , Retina/physiology , Oxides
18.
Nat Commun ; 14(1): 4611, 2023 Aug 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37528109

ABSTRACT

Metal halide perovskites have shown great promise as a potential candidate for next-generation solid state lighting and display technologies. However, a generic organic ligand-free and antisolvent-free solution method to fabricate highly efficient full-color perovskite light-emitting diodes has not been realized. Herein, by utilizing porous alumina membranes with ultra-small pore size as templates, we have successfully fabricated crystalline all-inorganic perovskite quantum wire arrays with ultrahigh density and excellent uniformity, using a generic organic ligand-free and anti-solvent-free solution method. The quantum confinement effect, in conjunction with the high light out-coupling efficiency, results in high photoluminescence quantum yield for blue, sky-blue, green and pure-red perovskite quantum wires arrays. Consequently, blue, sky-blue, green and pure-red LED devices with spectrally stable electroluminescence have been successfully fabricated, demonstrating external quantum efficiencies of 12.41%, 16.49%, 26.09% and 9.97%, respectively, after introducing a dual-functional small molecule, which serves as surface passivation and hole transporting layer, and a halide vacancy healing agent.

19.
Langmuir ; 28(12): 5427-31, 2012 Mar 27.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22339438

ABSTRACT

We present a straightforward method to produce highly crystalline, vertically oriented TiO(x)N(y) nanopillars (up to 1 µm in length) with a band gap in the visible-light region. This process starts with reactive dc sputtering to produce a TiN porous film, followed by a simple oxidation process at elevated temperatures in oxygen or air. By controlling the oxidation conditions, the band gap of the prepared TiO(x)N(y) can be tuned to different wavelength within the range of visible light. Furthermore, in order to inhibit carrier recombination to enhance the photocatalytic activity, Ag nanoparticles have been embedded into the nanogaps between the TiO(x)N(y) pillars by photoinduced reduction of Ag(+) (aq) irradiated with visible light. Transmission electron microscopy reveals that the Ag nanoparticles with a diameter of about 10 nm are uniformly dispersed along the pillars. The prepared TiO(x)N(y) nanopillar matrix and Ag:TiO(x)N(y) network show strong photocatalytic activity under visible-light irradiation, evaluated via degradation of Rhodamine B.

20.
Sci Adv ; 8(35): eabq8432, 2022 Sep 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36044578

ABSTRACT

Infrared vision is highly desirable for applications in multifarious fields. Of the few species with this visual capability, snakes have exceptional infrared perception with the assistance of pit organs. Inspired by the pit organ design we present here a hemispherical biomimetic infrared imaging device. The devices use high-density ionic thermoelectric polymer nanowire arrays that serve as the sensing nerve cells. The individual nanowires exhibit notable voltage response to temperature variation in test objects. An infrared sensor array with 625 pixels on the hemispherical substrate is successfully demonstrated with an ultrawide field of view up to 135°. The device can image body temperature objects without a cooling system and external power supply. This work opens up opportunities for the design and fabrication of bioinspired infrared imaging devices based on emerging ionic thermoelectric materials.

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