TY - JOUR
AU - Zhang, P.
AU - Bousack, Herbert
AU - Dai, Y.
AU - Offenhäusser, A.
AU - Mayer, D.
TI - Shell-binary nanoparticle materials with variable electrical and electro-mechanical properties
JO - Nanoscale
VL - 10
IS - 3
SN - 2040-3372
CY - Cambridge
PB - RSC Publ.
M1 - FZJ-2018-00819
SP - 992 - 1003
PY - 2018
AB - Nanoparticle (NP) materials with the capability to adjust their electrical and electro-mechanical properties facilitate applications in strain sensing technology. Traditional NP materials based on single component NPs lack a systematic and effective means of tuning their electrical and electro-mechanical properties. Here, we report on a new type of shell-binary NP material fabricated by self-assembly with either homogeneous or heterogeneous arrangements of NPs. Variable electrical and electro-mechanical properties were obtained for both materials. We show that the electrical and electro-mechanical properties of these shell-binary NP materials are highly tunable and strongly affected by the NP species as well as their corresponding volume fraction ratio. The conductivity and the gauge factor of these shell-binary NP materials can be altered by about five and two orders of magnitude, respectively. These shell-binary NP materials with different arrangements of NPs also demonstrate different volume fraction dependent electro-mechanical properties. The shell-binary NP materials with a heterogeneous arrangement of NPs exhibit a peaking of the sensitivity at medium mixing ratios, which arises from the aggregation induced local strain enhancement. Studies on the electron transport regimes and micro-morphologies of these shell-binary NP materials revealed the different mechanisms accounting for the variable electrical and electro-mechanical properties. A model based on effective medium theory is used to describe the electrical and electro-mechanical properties of such shell-binary nanomaterials and shows an excellent match with experiment data. These shell-binary NP materials possess great potential applications in high-performance strain sensing technology due to their variable electrical and electro-mechanical properties.
LB - PUB:(DE-HGF)16
C6 - pmid:29265122
UR - <Go to ISI:>//WOS:000423259000013
DO - DOI:10.1039/C7NR07912E
UR - https://juser.fz-juelich.de/record/842606
ER -