Energy harvesting is emerging as a
viable1 method for electronic devices to pull ambient energy from their surrounding environment and convert it into electrical energy for stored power. This
coveted2 technology has the potential to serve as an alternative power supply for batteries that are ubiquitous in mobile and
autonomous3 wireless4 electronic devices. A group of smart materials known as "electrostrictive polymers" have been explored for years by researchers at the INSA de Lyon for their potential mechanical energy harvesting abilities. This week in the journal
Applied5 Physics Letters, from AIP Publishing, the group reports that introducing a plasticizer into these materials offers an efficient way to improve their mechanical energy harvesting performance.
This is a significant breakthrough because one of the biggest challenges for the development of mechanical energy harvesting via electrostrictive polymers is being able to improve their performance.
As a group of smart materials, electrostrictive polymers can produce field-induced strain when exposed to an applied external electric field. "And this strain has a quadric -- equation described by the second degree -- relationship with the applied electric field," explained Xunqian Yin, lead author and a researcher at the INSA de Lyon.
The group's work centers largely on the piezoelectric effect, which refers to the accumulation of electric charge in certain crystalline solids without a symmetric center in response to an applied mechanical stress or strain.
In this case, "the electrostrictive polymers are non-piezoelectric in nature," said Yin. "But a pseudo-piezoelectric effect can be induced for electrostrictive polymers when they're exposed to a large applied
bias6 DC electric field. As a result, the pseudo-piezoelectric effect was adopted for the mechanical energy harvesting via electrostrictive polymers."
The group studied the influences on mechanical energy harvesting of a variety of operating conditions, including large applied bias DC electric field, as well as the
amplitude7 and frequency of applied external strain. They discovered that increasing the applied bias provides a way to improve the energy
conversion8 efficiency.
In particular, when they worked with a plasticizer-modified "terpolymer," it offered improved mechanical energy harvesting performance, especially when imposed to the same force level, and it can be tapped to create highly sensitive force
sensors9. "The 'lossy' dielectric and mechanical nature of the modified terpolymer play an important role for energy harvesting based on electrostrictive polymers," Yin said.