| Literature DB >> 30424436 |
Youn-Hwan Shin1, Inki Jung2,3, Hyunchul Park4, Jung Joon Pyeon5, Jeong Gon Son6, Chong Min Koo7,8, Sangtae Kim9, Chong-Yun Kang10,11.
Abstract
The fatigue resistance of piezoelectric PVDF has been under question in recent years. While some report that a significant degradation occurs after 10⁶ cycles of repeated voltage input, others report that the reported degradation originates from the degraded metal electrodes instead of the piezoelectric PVDF itself. Here, we report the piezoelectric response and remnant polarization of PVDF during 10⁷ cycles of repeated compression and tension, with silver paste-based electrodes to eliminate any electrode effect. After applying repeated tension and compression of 1.8% for 10⁷ times, we do not observe any notable decrease in the output voltage generated by PVDF layers. The results from tension experiments show stable remnant polarization of 5.5 μC/cm², however, the remnant polarization measured after repeated compression exhibits a 7% decrease as opposed to the tensed PVDF. These results suggest a possible anisotropic response to stress direction. The phase analyses by Raman spectroscopy reveals no significant change in the phase content, demonstrating the fatigue resistance of PVDF.Entities:
Keywords: PVDF; ferroelectric; mechanical fatigue resistance; piezoelectric; remnant polarization
Year: 2018 PMID: 30424436 PMCID: PMC6215162 DOI: 10.3390/mi9100503
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Micromachines (Basel) ISSN: 2072-666X Impact factor: 2.891
Figure 1The test setup for piezoelectric PVDF’s fatigue measurement system (a) Unit PVDF capacitor with silver paste electrode and sealing layer (b) PVDF based piezoelectric generator device with PI substrate (c) The homemade servo motor-based bending system with controlled frequency and input displacement. (d) The unit PVDF capacitor based bimorph-shaped device with dipole arrangement inside the PVDF and electric flow.
Figure 2The measured open circuit voltages during repeated bending of 107 times (a–c) The open circuit voltage profile for tensed PVDF layers (d–f) those for compressed PVDF layers.
Figure 3The PE hysteresis loop of PVDF at pristine and after applying 107 tensile and compressive stressed. The initial remnant polarization of 5.48 μm/cm2 at pristine PVDF remains almost identical after tensile fatigue tests, however, decreases to 5.08 μm/cm2 compressive fatigue tests.
Figure 4(a) The Raman shift observed for PVDF at pristine and after applying 107 tensile and compressive stress. (b) The average intensity ratio (I) with the standard deviation plotted as the error bars.