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https://archief.nwo-i.nl/en/news/2011/10/18/ultra-thin-piezoelectrics-for-energy-harvesting/

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June 23rd 2025
14:46:34

However, piezoelectric materials have the potential to play an even greater role in society by harvesting the energy that is wasted ubiquitously as vibrations (from cars, house appliances, industrial machine) and transforming it into electricity. But in order to fulfil our dream of paving roads, railways and homes with piezoelectrics, these materials have to be made lighter, thinner and less toxic than the ones available today (which contain heavy chemical elements). An important step into this direction has been achieved by a team led by FOM-projectleader prof.dr. Beatriz Noheda (Zernike Institute for Advanced Materials) and in collaboration with the Mesa+ Institute of the University of Twente, the CIN2-Barcelona and the CEMES-CNRS Institutes in Toulouse and Zaragoza. The results have been published in Nature Materials.

Flexo-electricity
The researches have shown that ultra-thin films (with thickness of about one hundred atomic layers) of piezoelectric materials deposited under carefully designed conditions, self-organize and flex at the nanometer scale in periodic fashion. This produces huge strain gradients (large differences in the distances between atoms) in such a way that a new mechanism to produce piezoelectricity can take place (so-called flexoelectricity). This greatly increases the materials response at these small thicknesses. Moreover, this novel way of producing piezoelectricity is less dependent on the chemical composition and will allow non-toxic and more readily available materials to be investigated for piezoelectric energy harvesting application.

Prof. Beatriz Noheda is Associate Professor of Functional Nanomaterials and Rosalind Franklin Fellow. In 2004 she received a NWO Vidi-grant.

Reference
Flexo-electric rotation of polarization in ferroelectric thin films, G. Catalan, A. Lubk, A. H. G. Vlooswijk, E. Snoeck, C. Magen, A. Janssens, G. Rispens, G. Rijnders, D. H. A. Blank and B. Noheda. Nature Materials.
DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/NMAT3141 

 

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