AI Article Synopsis

  • Localized electric fields are gaining attention for their applications in positioning microparticles for advanced electronic, optical, and magnetic devices.
  • Researchers have developed a new voltage-free pyro-electrification (PE) process that induces permanent dipole orientation in polymer sheets, streamlining the production of charged materials.
  • This technique, utilizing the pyroelectric effect, is cost-effective and eliminates the need for complex electrical circuits, making it suitable for various applications, including live cell patterning and biofilm testing in food processing.

Article Abstract

Localized electric fields have become, in recent years, a source of inspiration to researchers and laboratories thanks to a huge amount of applications derived from it, including positioning of microparticles as building blocks for electrical, optical, and magnetic devices. The possibility of producing polymeric materials with surface charge thus opens new perspectives for applications where process simplicity and cost-effectiveness of flexible electronics are of fundamental importance. In particular, the influence of surface charges is widely studied and is a critical issue especially when new materials and functional technologies are introduced. Here, we report a voltage-free pyro-electrification (PE) process able to induce a permanent dipole orientation into polymer sheets under both mono- and bipolar distribution. The technique makes use of the pyroelectric effect for generating electric potentials on the order of kilovolts by an easy-to-accomplish thermal treatment of ferroelectric lithium niobate (LN) crystals. The PE allows us to avoid the expensive and time-consuming fabrication of high-power electrical circuits, as occurs in traditional generator-based techniques. Since the technique is fully compatible with spin-coating-based procedures, the pyro-electrified polymer sheets are easily peeled off the surface of the LN crystal after PE completion, thus providing highly stable and freestanding charged sheets. We show the reliability of the technique for different polymers and for different applications ranging from live cell patterning to biofilm formation tests for bacteria linked to food-processing environments.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6594357PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fchem.2019.00429DOI Listing

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