Liquid metal synthesis for better piezoelectrics: Atomically-thin tin-monosulfide
| Date | 10th, Jul 2020 |
|---|---|
| Source | EurekAlert - Scientific News Websites |
DESCRIPTION
An RMIT-UNSW collaboration applies liquid-metal synthesis to piezoelectrics, advancing future flexible, wearable electronics, and biosensors drawing their power from the body's movements.Piezoelectric materials such as atomically-thin tin-monosulfide (SnS) convert mechanical forces or movement into electrical energy. Along with their inherent flexibility, this makes them candidates for flexible nanogenerators in wearable electronics or internal, self-powered biosensors.