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1.
J Mater Chem B ; 11(44): 10640-10650, 2023 11 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37877204

ABSTRACT

A novel self-powered wearable triboelectric biosensor concept is proposed in this paper, which consists of Scotch tape and a metalized polyester sheet (Al/PET). The Scotch tape is the sensing element by exploring the interaction between the tape polypropylene backing material and the acrylic adhesive layer when pressing and releasing. The polypropylene surface only has partial positive charges because of a nonpolar surface, while the acrylic adhesive has a polar surface with positively and negatively charged and neutral regions. Atomic size gaps are formed because of the attractive and repulsive areas at the interface due to van der Waals forces. These density depleted regions act as 'geometric' gaps to produce triboelectric charges via contact and separation on a microscopic scale. This leads to our wearable biosensor design for measuring human body motion. Associated skin contraction and relaxation during body motion will activate the contact and separation between the polypropylene and acrylic adhesive layer when the sensor assembly is adhered to the skin. Various demonstrations were conducted to detect different body motions, including elbow flexion at a low angle, forearm protonation, forearm supination, knee flexion/extension, proximal interphalangeal flexion/extension, temple motion due to eye blinking, and temporomandibular opening. Unique features can be identified which are associated with different body motions. Moreover, the measurements from our triboelectric sensor correlate well with the results from a commercial electromyography (EMG) sensor in an isokinetic leg extension test, which leads to a new method of measuring human muscle activation.


Subject(s)
Biosensing Techniques , Wearable Electronic Devices , Humans , Muscle, Skeletal/physiology , Polypropylenes , Electromyography
2.
ACS Omega ; 8(10): 9326-9333, 2023 Mar 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36936286

ABSTRACT

A novel contact-separation triboelectric generator concept is proposed in this paper, which consists of a limestone-based mounting putty and a metallized polyester (PET/Al) sheet. This is an attempt to explore tacky materials for power generation and extend the operational frequency bandwidth compared to existing TriboElectric NanoGenerators (TENGs). Moreover, the proposed design is very cost-effective and easy to build. Unlike traditional TENGs, which generate power solely due to a charge developing on the surface, the putty also replies on charge developed inside the material. Parametric study was conducted to determine the optimal putty thickness in a shaker test at 40 Hz. It was found that a putty layer at 0.6 mm thick yielded maximum power generation. During the separation phase, the electrical breakdown between triboelectric layers allows most existing electrons to flow back from the ground due to rapid charge removal at the interface. We are able to achieve a peak power of 16 mW in a shaker test at 40 Hz with an electrical load of 8 MΩ, which corresponds to a power density of 25.6 W/m2. A peak power of 120 mW in a manual prototype generator is achieved, which operates at approximately 2 Hz. Since putty material has less tackiness than double-sided tape, we are able to expand the frequency bandwidth up to 80 Hz, which is significantly higher than a TENG (typically <10 Hz). The mounting putty material contains limestone with approximate 31 nm of mean grain size mixed with synthetic rubber materials. Elasticity from rubber and the nanohardness of calcite crystallites allow us to operate a putty generator repeatedly without the concern of grain fracture. Also, a durability test was conducted with up to 250,000 contact-separation cycles. In summary, comparable performance is achieved in the proposed putty generator to benefit energy harvesting and sensor applications.

3.
ACS Omega ; 7(46): 42359-42369, 2022 Nov 22.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36440170

ABSTRACT

A novel contact-separation triboelectric generator concept is proposed in this study, which is composed of a double-sided tape with acrylic adhesive material and a metalized polyester (PET/Al) film (an aluminum layer coating on one side). The proposed concept is very cost-effective and easy to fabricate compared to existing triboelectric nanogenerators (TENGs), which require special equipment and sophisticated procedure to build. The strong bonding nature of acrylic adhesive on the tape induces a significant charge when contacting. The peak power generation depends on the induced pressure at the impact. During the separation phase, the air breakdown between triboelectric layers allows most existing electrons to flow back from the ground due to rapid charge removal at the interface. A higher voltage can be generated when the PET is interfaced with the double-sided tape compared to the Al-acrylic configuration because of the effect of triboelectric series and a Schottky barrier formation for electrons at the tape-Al interface during contact. A double-electrode configuration with an assembly of Al/PET-tape-PET/Al significantly improved the performance, in which a 21.2 mW peak power is achieved compared to 7.6 mW in the single-electrode design with tape-PET/Al assembly when excited at 20 Hz in a shaker test. This double-electrode triboelectric generator can power 476 LEDs with an active area of 38 mm × 25 mm. Moreover, a direct power of a 650 nm laser diode was demonstrated. In summary, the proposed triboelectric generator concept using tacky materials shows the potential for higher-energy harvesting via triboelectrification and advances the state of the art by offering low cost and easy fabrication options. It is expected that such newly proposed triboelectric generators are able to meet power requirements in many engineering applications.

4.
Appl Opt ; 59(33): 10228-10235, 2020 Nov 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33361951

ABSTRACT

Photoconductive PbSe thin films are highly important for mid-infrared imaging applications. However, the photoconductive mechanism is not well understood so far. Here we provide additional insight on the photoconductivity mechanism using transmission electron microscopy, x-ray photoelectron microscopy, and electrical characterizations. Polycrystalline PbSe thin films were deposited by a chemical bath deposition method. Potassium iodide (KI) was added during the deposition process to improve the photoresponse. Oxidation and iodization were performed to sensitize the thin films. The temperature-dependence Hall effect results show that a strong hole-phonon interaction occurs in oxidized PbSe with KI. It indicates that about half the holes are trapped by KI-induced self-trapped hole centers (Vk center), which results in increasing dark resistance. The photo Hall effect results show that the hole concentration increases significantly under light exposure in sensitized PbSe, which indicates the photogenerated electrons are compensated by trapped holes. The presence of KI in the PbSe grains was confirmed by I 3d5/2 core-level x-ray photoelectron spectra. The energy dispersive x-ray spectra obtained in the scanning transmission electron microscope show the incorporation of iodine during the iodization process on the top of PbSe grains, which can create an iodine-incorporated PbSe outer shell. The iodine-incorporated PbSe releases electrons to recombine with holes in the PbSe layer so that the resistance of sensitized PbSe is about 800 times higher than that of PbSe without the iodine-incorporated layer. In addition, oxygen found in the outer shell of PbSe can act as an electron trap. Therefore, the photoresponse of sensitized PbSe is from the difference between the high dark resistance (by KI addition and iodine incorporation) and the low resistance after IR exposure due to electron compensation (by electron traps at grain boundary and electron-hole recombination in KI hole traps).

5.
Appl Opt ; 59(30): 9409-9414, 2020 Oct 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33104658

ABSTRACT

PbSe thin films were deposited on SiO2/Si wafers using chemical bath deposition for mid-wave infrared (MWIR) detection. To enhance the photosensitivity of PbSe thin films, oxidation, followed by iodization, was performed to create a PbI2/PbSe two-layer system for efficient MWIR detection in the spectral range from 3 µm to 5 µm. A near-infrared (IR) laser annealing was performed after sensitization with 1070 nm wavelength at an energy density of 1J/cm2 to selectively heat the PbSe thin films. After IR laser annealing, the change in resistance between dark condition and MWIR illumination improved significantly from 19.8% to 22.6%. In addition, the dark resistance increased by 32.5% after IR laser annealing. IR photoluminescence spectra after IR laser annealing shows an increase in the sub-peak intensities from iodine incorporation. The results indicate that more iodine is incorporated into Se sites at the outer regions of PbSe grains. Therefore, more donors (electrons) from iodine diffuse into PbSe and recombine with holes so that PbSe thin film after IR laser annealing shows much higher dark resistance. Test devices with NiCr electrodes at the bottom of PbSe were fabricated with feature sizes of 40 µm to investigate the effect of IR laser annealing on electrical properties and specific detectivity (D∗). I-V characteristics show dark resistance increased after IR laser annealing. The specific detectivity increases significantly after IR laser annealing at the applied bias of 10 V at 270 K from 0.55×1010cmHz1/2W-1 to 1.23×1010cmHz1/2W-1 due to dramatic noise reduction, which is originated from higher dark resistance.

6.
J Chem Phys ; 152(2): 024710, 2020 Jan 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31941318

ABSTRACT

Pt-Pd bimetallic nanoparticles were synthesized on TiO2 support on the planar substrate as well as on high surface area SiO2 gel by atomic layer deposition to identify the catalytic performance improvement after the formation of Pt-Pd bimetallic nanoparticles by surface analysis techniques. From X-ray absorption near edge spectra of Pt-Pd bimetallic nanoparticles, d-orbital hybridization between Pt 5d and Pd 4d was observed, which is responsible for charge transfer from Pt to Pd. Moreover, it was found from the in situ grazing incidence X-ray absorption spectroscopy study that Pt-Pd nanoparticles have a Pd shell/Pt core structure with CO adsorption. Resonant photoemission spectroscopy on Pt-Pd bimetallic nanoparticles showed that Pd resonant intensity is enhanced compared to that of Pd monometallic nanoparticles because of d-orbital hybridization and electronic states broadening of Pt and Pd compared monometallic catalysts, which results in catalytic performance improvement.

7.
IEEE Trans Biomed Circuits Syst ; 13(6): 1288-1299, 2019 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31751251

ABSTRACT

This paper presents the first CMOS Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor (VEGF) sensor for cancer diagnosis directly from human blood. The sensor incorporates a peptide aptamer-based microneedle that allows the detection of electrochemical reactions with VEGF. This results in a capacitance change between the microneedles and then reads out by a two-step capacitance-to-digital converter (CDC). The proposed two-step CDC consists of a coarse 5b slope ADC and a fine 14b continuous-time delta-sigma modulator (CTDSM). During slow peptide-binding, the slope ADC performs a coarse conversion and the results are used to adjust the current level of the stimulator. After settling of the peptide-binding, based on an adjusted stimulation current, the CTDSM measures the small capacitance changes of the sensor. The prototype chip is fabricated in a 65-nm CMOS process, occupying a 0.87 mm 2 active area. The power consumption is 270 muW. Thanks to the two-step approach, this work achieves a wide dynamic range of 18.3b, covering a large sensor-to-sensor variation. It also achieves a peak resolution of 13.7b, while maintaining errors in 1 to 100 nF baseline capacitance. The overall sensor system successfully detects the VEGF in both phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) and human blood serum. Without the use of precision instruments, this work achieves a resolution of 15 fM [Formula: see text] in range of 0.1 to 1000 pM and denotes the clear VEGF selectivity at 40× in PBS and 5× in the blood serum compared to other proteins (IgG, Con A, and cholera toxin).


Subject(s)
Biosensing Techniques/instrumentation , Neoplasms/diagnosis , Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor A/analysis , Aptamers, Peptide/metabolism , Electric Capacitance , Equipment Design , Humans , Semiconductors , Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor A/blood
8.
Nat Commun ; 8: 15666, 2017 06 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28580928

ABSTRACT

Memristors are promising building blocks for the next-generation memory and neuromorphic computing systems. Most memristors use materials that are incompatible with the silicon dominant complementary metal-oxide-semiconductor technology, and require external selectors in order for large memristor arrays to function properly. Here we demonstrate a fully foundry-compatible, all-silicon-based and self-rectifying memristor that negates the need for external selectors in large arrays. With a p-Si/SiO2/n-Si structure, our memristor exhibits repeatable unipolar resistance switching behaviour (105 rectifying ratio, 104 ON/OFF) and excellent retention at 300 °C. We further build three-dimensinal crossbar arrays (up to five layers of 100 nm memristors) using fluid-supported silicon membranes, and experimentally confirm the successful suppression of both intra- and inter-layer sneak path currents through the built-in diodes. The current work opens up opportunities for low-cost mass production of three-dimensional memristor arrays on large silicon and flexible substrates without increasing circuit complexity.

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