| Literature DB >> 34437153 |
Fan Yang1,2,3, Jun Li1, Yin Long1, Ziyi Zhang1, Linfeng Wang1, Jiajie Sui1, Yutao Dong1, Yizhan Wang1, Rachel Taylor4, Dalong Ni5, Weibo Cai5, Ping Wang2,3, Timothy Hacker4, Xudong Wang6.
Abstract
Piezoelectric biomaterials are intrinsically suitable for coupling mechanical and electrical energy in biological systems to achieve in vivo real-time sensing, actuation, and electricity generation. However, the inability to synthesize and align the piezoelectric phase at a large scale remains a roadblock toward practical applications. We present a wafer-scale approach to creating piezoelectric biomaterial thin films based on γ-glycine crystals. The thin film has a sandwich structure, where a crystalline glycine layer self-assembles and automatically aligns between two polyvinyl alcohol (PVA) thin films. The heterostructured glycine-PVA films exhibit piezoelectric coefficients of 5.3 picocoulombs per newton or 157.5 × 10-3 volt meters per newton and nearly an order of magnitude enhancement of the mechanical flexibility compared with pure glycine crystals. With its natural compatibility and degradability in physiological environments, glycine-PVA films may enable the development of transient implantable electromechanical devices.Entities:
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34437153 PMCID: PMC8516594 DOI: 10.1126/science.abf2155
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Science ISSN: 0036-8075 Impact factor: 63.714