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Search Results (1,403)

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Keywords = flexible electronic devices

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27 pages, 4070 KiB  
Article
Quantum Transport in GFETs Combining Landauer–Büttiker Formalism with Self-Consistent Schrödinger–Poisson Solutions
by Modesto Herrera-González, Jaime Martínez-Castillo, Pedro J. García-Ramírez, Enrique Delgado-Alvarado, Pedro Mabil-Espinosa, Jairo C. Nolasco-Montaño and Agustín L. Herrera-May
Technologies 2025, 13(8), 333; https://doi.org/10.3390/technologies13080333 (registering DOI) - 1 Aug 2025
Abstract
The unique properties of graphene have allowed for the development of graphene-based field-effect transistors (GFETs) for applications in biosensors and chemical devices. However, the modeling and optimization of GFET performance exhibit great challenges. Herein, we propose a quantum transport simulation model for graphene-based [...] Read more.
The unique properties of graphene have allowed for the development of graphene-based field-effect transistors (GFETs) for applications in biosensors and chemical devices. However, the modeling and optimization of GFET performance exhibit great challenges. Herein, we propose a quantum transport simulation model for graphene-based field-effect transistors (GFETs) implemented in the open-source Octave programming language. The proposed simulation model (named SimQ) combines the Landauer–Büttiker formalism with self-consistent Schrödinger–Poisson solutions, enabling reliable simulations of transport phenomena. Our approach agrees well with established models, achieving Landauer–Büttiker transmission and tunneling transmission of 0.28 and 0.92, respectively, which are validated against experimental data. The model can predict key GFET characteristics, including carrier mobilities (500–4000 cm2/V·s), quantum capacitance effects, and high-frequency operation (80–100 GHz). SimQ offers detailed insights into charge distribution and wave function evolution, achieving an enhanced computational efficiency through optimized algorithms. Our work contributes to the modeling of graphene-based field-effect transistors, providing a flexible and accessible simulation platform for designing and optimizing GFETs with potential applications in the next generation of electronic devices. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Technological Advances in Science, Medicine, and Engineering 2024)
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18 pages, 6642 KiB  
Article
Flood Impact and Evacuation Behavior in Toyohashi City, Japan: A Case Study of the 2 June 2023 Heavy Rain Event
by Masaya Toyoda, Reo Minami, Ryoto Asakura and Shigeru Kato
Sustainability 2025, 17(15), 6999; https://doi.org/10.3390/su17156999 (registering DOI) - 1 Aug 2025
Abstract
Recent years have seen frequent heavy rainfall events in Japan, often linked to Baiu fronts and typhoons. These events are exacerbated by global warming, leading to an increased frequency and intensity. As floods represent a serious threat to sustainable urban development and community [...] Read more.
Recent years have seen frequent heavy rainfall events in Japan, often linked to Baiu fronts and typhoons. These events are exacerbated by global warming, leading to an increased frequency and intensity. As floods represent a serious threat to sustainable urban development and community resilience, this study contributes to sustainability-focused risk reduction through integrated analysis. This study focuses on the 2 June 2023 heavy rain disaster in Toyohashi City, Japan, which caused extensive damage due to flooding from the Yagyu and Umeda Rivers. Using numerical models, this study accurately reproduces flooding patterns, revealing that high tides amplified the inundation area by 1.5 times at the Yagyu River. A resident questionnaire conducted in collaboration with Toyohashi City identifies key trends in evacuation behavior and disaster information usage. Traditional media such as TV remain dominant, but younger generations leverage electronic devices for disaster updates. These insights emphasize the need for targeted information dissemination and enhanced disaster preparedness strategies, including online materials and flexible training programs. The methods and findings presented in this study can inform local and regional governments in building adaptive disaster management policies, which contribute to a more sustainable society. Full article
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14 pages, 4052 KiB  
Article
ZnO/PVDF Nanogenerators with Hemisphere-Patterned PDMS for Enhanced Piezoelectric Performance
by Kibum Song and Keun-Young Shin
Polymers 2025, 17(15), 2041; https://doi.org/10.3390/polym17152041 - 26 Jul 2025
Viewed by 358
Abstract
In this study, we present a flexible piezoelectric nanogenerator based on a zinc oxide (ZnO)/polyvinylidene fluoride (PVDF) nanocomposite electrospun onto a hemisphere-patterned PDMS substrate. The nanogenerator was fabricated by replicating a silicon mold with inverted hemispheres into PDMS, followed by direct electrospinning of [...] Read more.
In this study, we present a flexible piezoelectric nanogenerator based on a zinc oxide (ZnO)/polyvinylidene fluoride (PVDF) nanocomposite electrospun onto a hemisphere-patterned PDMS substrate. The nanogenerator was fabricated by replicating a silicon mold with inverted hemispheres into PDMS, followed by direct electrospinning of ZnO-dispersed PVDF nanofibers. Varying the ZnO concentration from 0.6 to 1.4 wt% allowed us to evaluate its effect on structural, dielectric, and piezoelectric properties. The nanogenerator containing 0.8 wt% ZnO exhibited the thinnest fibers (371 nm), the highest β-phase fraction (85.6%), and the highest dielectric constant (35.8). As a result, it achieved the maximum output voltage of 7.30 V, with excellent signal consistency under an applied pressure of 5 N. Comparisons with pristine PVDF- and ZnO/PVDF-only devices demonstrated the synergistic effect of ZnO loading and patterned PDMS on the enhancement of piezoelectric output. The hemisphere-patterned PDMS substrate improved the mechanical strain distribution, interfacial contact, and charge collection efficiency. These results highlight the potential of ZnO/PVDF/PDMS hybrid nanogenerators for use in wearable electronics and self-powered sensor systems. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Recent Advances in Applied Polymers in Renewable Energy)
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27 pages, 6456 KiB  
Article
An Open Multifunctional FPGA-Based Pulser/Receiver System for Intravascular Ultrasound (IVUS) Imaging and Therapy
by Amauri A. Assef, Paula L. S. de Moura, Joaquim M. Maia, Phuong Vu, Adeoye O. Olomodosi, Stephan Strassle Rojas and Brooks D. Lindsey
Sensors 2025, 25(15), 4599; https://doi.org/10.3390/s25154599 - 25 Jul 2025
Viewed by 298
Abstract
Coronary artery disease (CAD) is the third leading cause of disability and death globally. Intravascular ultrasound (IVUS) is the most commonly used imaging modality for the characterization of vulnerable plaques. The development of novel intravascular imaging and therapy devices requires dedicated open systems [...] Read more.
Coronary artery disease (CAD) is the third leading cause of disability and death globally. Intravascular ultrasound (IVUS) is the most commonly used imaging modality for the characterization of vulnerable plaques. The development of novel intravascular imaging and therapy devices requires dedicated open systems (e.g., for pulse sequences for imaging or thrombolysis), which are not currently available. This paper presents the development of a novel multifunctional FPGA-based pulser/receiver system for intravascular ultrasound imaging and therapy research. The open platform consists of a host PC with a Matlab-based software interface, an FPGA board, and a proprietary analog front-end board with state-of-the-art electronics for highly flexible transmission and reception schemes. The main features of the system include the capability to convert arbitrary waveforms into tristate bipolar pulses by using the PWM technique and by the direct acquisition of raw radiofrequency (RF) echo data. The results of a multicycle excitation pulse applied to a custom 550 kHz therapy transducer for acoustic characterization and a pulse-echo experiment conducted with a high-voltage, short-pulse excitation for a 19.48 MHz transducer are reported. Testing results show that the proposed system can be easily controlled to match the frequency and bandwidth required for different IVUS transducers across a broad class of applications. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Ultrasonic Imaging and Sensors II)
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14 pages, 4639 KiB  
Article
CNTs/CNPs/PVA–Borax Conductive Self-Healing Hydrogel for Wearable Sensors
by Chengcheng Peng, Ziyan Shu, Xinjiang Zhang and Cailiu Yin
Gels 2025, 11(8), 572; https://doi.org/10.3390/gels11080572 - 23 Jul 2025
Viewed by 273
Abstract
The development of multifunctional conductive hydrogels with rapid self-healing capabilities and powerful sensing functions is crucial for advancing wearable electronics. This study designed and prepared a polyvinyl alcohol (PVA)–borax hydrogel incorporating carbon nanotubes (CNTs) and biomass carbon nanospheres (CNPs) as dual-carbon fillers. This [...] Read more.
The development of multifunctional conductive hydrogels with rapid self-healing capabilities and powerful sensing functions is crucial for advancing wearable electronics. This study designed and prepared a polyvinyl alcohol (PVA)–borax hydrogel incorporating carbon nanotubes (CNTs) and biomass carbon nanospheres (CNPs) as dual-carbon fillers. This hydrogel exhibits excellent conductivity, mechanical flexibility, and self-recovery properties. Serving as a highly sensitive piezoresistive sensor, it efficiently converts mechanical stimuli into reliable electrical signals. Sensing tests demonstrate that the CNT/CNP/PVA–borax hydrogel sensor possesses an extremely fast response time (88 ms) and rapid recovery time (88 ms), enabling the detection of subtle and rapid human motions. Furthermore, the hydrogel sensor also exhibits outstanding cyclic stability, maintaining stable signal output throughout continuous loading–unloading cycles exceeding 3200 repetitions. The hydrogel sensor’s characteristics, including rapid self-healing, fast-sensing response/recovery, and high fatigue resistance, make the CNT/CNP/PVA–borax conductive hydrogel an ideal choice for multifunctional wearable sensors. It successfully monitored various human motions. This study provides a promising strategy for high-performance self-healing sensing devices, suitable for next-generation wearable health monitoring and human–machine interaction systems. Full article
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14 pages, 4216 KiB  
Article
Redox-Active Anthraquinone-1-Sulfonic Acid Sodium Salt-Loaded Polyaniline for Dual-Functional Electrochromic Supercapacitors
by Yi Wang, Enkai Lin, Ze Wang, Tong Feng and An Xie
Gels 2025, 11(8), 568; https://doi.org/10.3390/gels11080568 - 23 Jul 2025
Viewed by 200
Abstract
Electrochromic (EC) devices are gaining increasing attention for next-generation smart windows and low-power displays due to their reversible color modulation, low operating voltage, and flexible form factors. Recently, electrochromic energy storage devices (EESDs) have emerged as a promising class of multifunctional systems, enabling [...] Read more.
Electrochromic (EC) devices are gaining increasing attention for next-generation smart windows and low-power displays due to their reversible color modulation, low operating voltage, and flexible form factors. Recently, electrochromic energy storage devices (EESDs) have emerged as a promising class of multifunctional systems, enabling simultaneous energy storage and real-time visual monitoring. In this study, we report a flexible dual-functional EESD constructed using polyaniline (PANI) films doped with anthraquinone-1-sulfonic acid sodium salt (AQS), coupled with a redox-active PVA-based gel electrolyte also incorporating AQS. The incorporation of AQS into both the polymer matrix and the gel electrolyte introduces synergistic redox activity, facilitating bidirectional Faradaic reactions at the film–electrolyte interface and within the bulk gel phase. The resulting vertically aligned PANI-AQS nanoneedle films provide high surface area and efficient ion pathways, while the AQS-doped gel electrolyte contributes to enhanced ionic conductivity and electrochemical stability. The device exhibits rapid and reversible color switching from light green to deep black (within 2 s), along with a high areal capacitance of 194.2 mF·cm−2 at 1 mA·cm−2 and 72.1% capacitance retention over 5000 cycles—representing a 31.5% improvement over undoped systems. These results highlight the critical role of redox-functionalized gel electrolytes in enhancing both the energy storage and optical performance of EESDs, offering a scalable strategy for multifunctional, gel-based electrochemical systems in wearable and smart electronics. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Smart Gels for Sensing Devices and Flexible Electronics)
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21 pages, 3864 KiB  
Review
PANI-Based Thermoelectric Materials
by Mengran Chen, Dongmei Xie, Hongqing Zhou and Pengan Zong
Organics 2025, 6(3), 33; https://doi.org/10.3390/org6030033 - 22 Jul 2025
Viewed by 265
Abstract
Polyaniline (PANI) based thermoelectric materials have attracted much attention in flexible energy harvesting devices due to their unique molecular structure, excellent chemical stability, and low cost. However, the intrinsic thermoelectric performance of intrinsic PANI makes it difficult to meet the needs of practical [...] Read more.
Polyaniline (PANI) based thermoelectric materials have attracted much attention in flexible energy harvesting devices due to their unique molecular structure, excellent chemical stability, and low cost. However, the intrinsic thermoelectric performance of intrinsic PANI makes it difficult to meet the needs of practical applications due to its low electronic transport properties. This review focuses on the preparation methods and key strategies for developing high-performance PANI-based thermoelectric materials. It aims to comprehensively update knowledge regarding synthesis methods, microstructures, thermoelectric properties, and underlying mechanisms. The overall goal is to provide timely insights to promote the development of high-performance PANI-based thermoelectric materials. Full article
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39 pages, 1774 KiB  
Review
FACTS Controllers’ Contribution for Load Frequency Control, Voltage Stability and Congestion Management in Deregulated Power Systems over Time: A Comprehensive Review
by Muhammad Asad, Muhammad Faizan, Pericle Zanchetta and José Ángel Sánchez-Fernández
Appl. Sci. 2025, 15(14), 8039; https://doi.org/10.3390/app15148039 - 18 Jul 2025
Viewed by 369
Abstract
Incremental energy demand, environmental constraints, restrictions in the availability of energy resources, economic conditions, and political impact prompt the power sector toward deregulation. In addition to these impediments, electric power competition for power quality, reliability, availability, and cost forces utilities to maximize utilization [...] Read more.
Incremental energy demand, environmental constraints, restrictions in the availability of energy resources, economic conditions, and political impact prompt the power sector toward deregulation. In addition to these impediments, electric power competition for power quality, reliability, availability, and cost forces utilities to maximize utilization of the existing infrastructure by flowing power on transmission lines near to their thermal limits. All these factors introduce problems related to power network stability, reliability, quality, congestion management, and security in restructured power systems. To overcome these problems, power-electronics-based FACTS devices are one of the beneficial solutions at present. In this review paper, the significant role of FACTS devices in restructured power networks and their technical benefits against various power system problems such as load frequency control, voltage stability, and congestion management will be presented. In addition, an extensive discussion about the comparison between different FACTS devices (series, shunt, and their combination) and comparison between various optimization techniques (classical, analytical, hybrid, and meta-heuristics) that support FACTS devices to achieve their respective benefits is presented in this paper. Generally, it is concluded that third-generation FACTS controllers are more popular to mitigate various power system problems (i.e., load frequency control, voltage stability, and congestion management). Moreover, a combination of multiple FACTS devices, with or without energy storage devices, is more beneficial compared to their individual usage. However, this is not commonly adopted in small power systems due to high installation or maintenance costs. Therefore, there is a trade-off between the selection and cost of FACTS devices to minimize the power system problems. Likewise, meta-heuristics and hybrid optimization techniques are commonly adopted to optimize FACTS devices due to their fast convergence, robustness, higher accuracy, and flexibility. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue State-of-the-Art of Power Systems)
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35 pages, 6415 KiB  
Review
Recent Advances in Conductive Hydrogels for Electronic Skin and Healthcare Monitoring
by Yan Zhu, Baojin Chen, Yiming Liu, Tiantian Tan, Bowen Gao, Lijun Lu, Pengcheng Zhu and Yanchao Mao
Biosensors 2025, 15(7), 463; https://doi.org/10.3390/bios15070463 - 18 Jul 2025
Viewed by 327
Abstract
In recent decades, flexible electronics have witnessed remarkable advancements in multiple fields, encompassing wearable electronics, human–machine interfaces (HMI), clinical diagnosis, and treatment, etc. Nevertheless, conventional rigid electronic devices are fundamentally constrained by their inherent non-stretchability and poor conformability, limitations that substantially impede their [...] Read more.
In recent decades, flexible electronics have witnessed remarkable advancements in multiple fields, encompassing wearable electronics, human–machine interfaces (HMI), clinical diagnosis, and treatment, etc. Nevertheless, conventional rigid electronic devices are fundamentally constrained by their inherent non-stretchability and poor conformability, limitations that substantially impede their practical applications. In contrast, conductive hydrogels (CHs) for electronic skin (E-skin) and healthcare monitoring have attracted substantial interest owing to outstanding features, including adjustable mechanical properties, intrinsic flexibility, stretchability, transparency, and diverse functional and structural designs. Considerable efforts focus on developing CHs incorporating various conductive materials to enable multifunctional wearable sensors and flexible electrodes, such as metals, carbon, ionic liquids (ILs), MXene, etc. This review presents a comprehensive summary of the recent advancements in CHs, focusing on their classifications and practical applications. Firstly, CHs are categorized into five groups based on the nature of the conductive materials employed. These categories include polymer-based, carbon-based, metal-based, MXene-based, and ionic CHs. Secondly, the promising applications of CHs for electrophysiological signals and healthcare monitoring are discussed in detail, including electroencephalogram (EEG), electrocardiogram (ECG), electromyogram (EMG), respiratory monitoring, and motion monitoring. Finally, this review concludes with a comprehensive summary of current research progress and prospects regarding CHs in the fields of electronic skin and health monitoring applications. Full article
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49 pages, 763 KiB  
Review
A Comprehensive Review on Sensor-Based Electronic Nose for Food Quality and Safety
by Teodora Sanislav, George D. Mois, Sherali Zeadally, Silviu Folea, Tudor C. Radoni and Ebtesam A. Al-Suhaimi
Sensors 2025, 25(14), 4437; https://doi.org/10.3390/s25144437 - 16 Jul 2025
Viewed by 659
Abstract
Food quality and safety are essential for ensuring public health, preventing foodborne illness, reducing food waste, maintaining consumer confidence, and supporting regulatory compliance and international trade. This has led to the emergence of many research works that focus on automating and streamlining the [...] Read more.
Food quality and safety are essential for ensuring public health, preventing foodborne illness, reducing food waste, maintaining consumer confidence, and supporting regulatory compliance and international trade. This has led to the emergence of many research works that focus on automating and streamlining the assessment of food quality. Electronic noses have become of paramount importance in this context. We analyze the current state of research in the development of electronic noses for food quality and safety. We examined research papers published in three different scientific databases in the last decade, leading to a comprehensive review of the field. Our review found that most of the efforts use portable, low-cost electronic noses, coupled with pattern recognition algorithms, for evaluating the quality levels in certain well-defined food classes, reaching accuracies exceeding 90% in most cases. Despite these encouraging results, key challenges remain, particularly in diversifying the sensor response across complex substances, improving odor differentiation, compensating for sensor drift, and ensuring real-world reliability. These limitations indicate that a complete device mimicking the flexibility and selectivity of the human olfactory system is not yet available. To address these gaps, our review recommends solutions such as the adoption of adaptive machine learning models to reduce calibration needs and enhance drift resilience and the implementation of standardized protocols for data acquisition and model validation. We introduce benchmark comparisons and a future roadmap for electronic noses that demonstrate their potential to evolve from controlled studies to scalable industrial applications. In doing so, this review aims not only to assess the state of the field but also to support its transition toward more robust, interpretable, and field-ready electronic nose technologies. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Sensors in 2025)
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11 pages, 2114 KiB  
Communication
The Effect of Substrate Surface Oxidation on Patterned Graphene Growth for Flexible Electronics
by Ruiqi Zhang, Ning Hou, Huawen Wang, Xu Chen, Haofei Shi and Xin Li
Materials 2025, 18(14), 3338; https://doi.org/10.3390/ma18143338 - 16 Jul 2025
Viewed by 289
Abstract
Graphene exhibits exceptional electronic properties, superior mechanical strength, and remarkable flexibility, driving significant advances in flexible electronics. However, achieving high-precision patterned graphene via in situ fabrication for such applications remains challenging, limiting the development of graphene-based flexible devices. In this study, we successfully [...] Read more.
Graphene exhibits exceptional electronic properties, superior mechanical strength, and remarkable flexibility, driving significant advances in flexible electronics. However, achieving high-precision patterned graphene via in situ fabrication for such applications remains challenging, limiting the development of graphene-based flexible devices. In this study, we successfully synthesized patterned graphene with high precision by substrate surface oxidation technology. The effect of substrate surface oxidation on patterned graphene growth was deeply investigated. By regulating the oxidation time, we precisely controlled the oxidation degree of the substrate and characterized the boundary precision between oxidized and unoxidized regions. Finally, we achieved the high-precision in situ fabrication of patterned graphene with a feature size of 0.5 μm on selectively oxidized substrates. Furthermore, we fabricated a flexible fluorescent device based on patterned graphene, demonstrating the pronounced fluorescence quenching effect of graphene (IGr-free/IGr-cov ≈ 3). Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Advances in Flexible Electronics and Electronic Devices)
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62 pages, 4690 KiB  
Review
Functional Nanomaterials for Advanced Bioelectrode Interfaces: Recent Advances in Disease Detection and Metabolic Monitoring
by Junlong Ma, Siyi Yang, Zhihao Yang, Ziliang He and Zhanhong Du
Sensors 2025, 25(14), 4412; https://doi.org/10.3390/s25144412 - 15 Jul 2025
Viewed by 811
Abstract
As critical interfaces bridging biological systems and electronic devices, the performance of bioelectrodes directly determines the sensitivity, selectivity, and reliability of biosensors. Recent advancements in functional nanomaterials (e.g., carbon nanomaterials, metallic nanoparticles, 2D materials) have substantially enhanced the application potential of bioelectrodes in [...] Read more.
As critical interfaces bridging biological systems and electronic devices, the performance of bioelectrodes directly determines the sensitivity, selectivity, and reliability of biosensors. Recent advancements in functional nanomaterials (e.g., carbon nanomaterials, metallic nanoparticles, 2D materials) have substantially enhanced the application potential of bioelectrodes in disease detection, metabolic monitoring, and early diagnosis through strategic material selection, structural engineering, interface modification, and antifouling treatment. This review systematically examines the latest progress in nanomaterial-enabled interface design of bioelectrodes, with particular emphasis on performance enhancements in electrophysiological/electrochemical signal acquisition and multimodal sensing technologies. We comprehensively analyze cutting-edge developments in dynamic metabolic parameter monitoring for chronic disease management, as well as emerging research on flexible, high-sensitivity electrode interfaces for early disease diagnosis. Furthermore, this work focused on persistent technical challenges regarding nanomaterial biocompatibility and long-term operational stability while providing forward-looking perspectives on their translational applications in wearable medical devices and personalized health management systems. The proposed framework offers actionable guidance for researchers in this interdisciplinary field. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Nanomaterial-Driven Innovations in Biosensing and Healthcare)
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38 pages, 5046 KiB  
Review
Photonics on a Budget: Low-Cost Polymer Sensors for a Smarter World
by Muhammad A. Butt
Micromachines 2025, 16(7), 813; https://doi.org/10.3390/mi16070813 - 15 Jul 2025
Viewed by 525
Abstract
Polymer-based photonic sensors are emerging as cost-effective, scalable alternatives to conventional silicon and glass photonic platforms, offering unique advantages in flexibility, functionality, and manufacturability. This review provides a comprehensive assessment of recent advances in polymer photonic sensing technologies, focusing on material systems, fabrication [...] Read more.
Polymer-based photonic sensors are emerging as cost-effective, scalable alternatives to conventional silicon and glass photonic platforms, offering unique advantages in flexibility, functionality, and manufacturability. This review provides a comprehensive assessment of recent advances in polymer photonic sensing technologies, focusing on material systems, fabrication techniques, device architectures, and application domains. Key polymer materials, including PMMA, SU-8, polyimides, COC, and PDMS, are evaluated for their optical properties, processability, and suitability for integration into sensing platforms. High-throughput fabrication methods such as nanoimprint lithography, soft lithography, roll-to-roll processing, and additive manufacturing are examined for their role in enabling large-area, low-cost device production. Various photonic structures, including planar waveguides, Bragg gratings, photonic crystal slabs, microresonators, and interferometric configurations, are discussed concerning their sensing mechanisms and performance metrics. Practical applications are highlighted in environmental monitoring, biomedical diagnostics, and structural health monitoring. Challenges such as environmental stability, integration with electronic systems, and reproducibility in mass production are critically analyzed. This review also explores future opportunities in hybrid material systems, printable photonics, and wearable sensor arrays. Collectively, these developments position polymer photonic sensors as promising platforms for widespread deployment in smart, connected sensing environments. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section A:Physics)
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12 pages, 3755 KiB  
Article
Effects of Processing Parameters on the Structure and Mechanical Property of PVDF/BN Nanofiber Yarns
by Jincheng Gui, Xu Liu and Hao Dou
Polymers 2025, 17(14), 1931; https://doi.org/10.3390/polym17141931 - 13 Jul 2025
Viewed by 343
Abstract
The increasing demand for light and comfort smart wearable devices has promoted the cross-integration of textile technology with nanomaterials and nanotechnology. As a potential candidate with excellent piezoelectricity, PVDF has been processed into different forms used for flexible sensors but shows limited practicality [...] Read more.
The increasing demand for light and comfort smart wearable devices has promoted the cross-integration of textile technology with nanomaterials and nanotechnology. As a potential candidate with excellent piezoelectricity, PVDF has been processed into different forms used for flexible sensors but shows limited practicality due to their discomfort and stiffness from non-yarn level. In this study, PVDF/BN nanofiber yarns (NFYs) were successfully fabricated via conjugated electrospinning. The effects of BN concentration, stretching temperature, and stretching ratio on the structural morphology and mechanical performance of the NFYs were systematically investigated. The results show that under the stretching temperature of 140 °C and stretching ratios of 3.5, smooth 1% PVDF/BN NFYs with highly oriented inner nanofibers can be successfully fabricated, and the breaking strength and elongation of composite NFYs reached 129.5 ± 8.1 MPa and 22.4 ± 3.8%, respectively, 667% higher than the breaking strength of pure PVDF nanoyarns. Hence, with the selection of appropriate nanofiller amounts and optimized post-treatment process, the structure and mechanical property of PVDF NFYs can be significantly improved, and this study provides an effective strategy to fabricate high-performance nanoyarns, which is favorable to potential applications in wearable electronic devices and flexible piezoelectric sensors. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Electrospinning Techniques and Advanced Polymer Textile Products)
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15 pages, 1099 KiB  
Article
Enhanced Efficiency and Mechanical Stability in Flexible Perovskite Solar Cells via Phenethylammonium Iodide Surface Passivation
by Ibtisam S. Almalki, Tamader H. Alenazi, Lina A. Mansouri, Zainab H. Al Mubarak, Zainab T. Al Nahab, Sultan M. Alenzi, Yahya A. Alzahrani, Ghazal S. Yafi, Abdulmajeed Almutairi, Abdurhman Aldukhail, Bader Alharthi, Abdulaziz Aljuwayr, Faisal S. Alghannam, Anas A. Almuqhim, Huda Alkhaldi, Fawziah Alhajri, Nouf K. AL-Saleem, Masfer Alkahtani, Anwar Q. Alanazi and Masaud Almalki
Nanomaterials 2025, 15(14), 1078; https://doi.org/10.3390/nano15141078 - 11 Jul 2025
Viewed by 504
Abstract
Flexible perovskite solar cells (FPSCs) hold great promise for lightweight and wearable photovoltaics, but improving their efficiency and durability under mechanical stress remains a key challenge. In this work, we fabricate and characterize flexible planar FPSCs on a polyethylene terephthalate (PET). A phenethylammonium [...] Read more.
Flexible perovskite solar cells (FPSCs) hold great promise for lightweight and wearable photovoltaics, but improving their efficiency and durability under mechanical stress remains a key challenge. In this work, we fabricate and characterize flexible planar FPSCs on a polyethylene terephthalate (PET). A phenethylammonium iodide (PEAI) surface passivation layer is introduced on the perovskite to form a two-dimensional capping layer, and its impact on device performance and stability is systematically studied. The champion PEAI-passivated flexible device achieves a power conversion efficiency (PCE) of ~16–17%, compared to ~14% for the control device without PEAI. The improvement is primarily due to an increased open-circuit voltage and fill factor, reflecting effective surface defect passivation and improved charge carrier dynamics. Importantly, mechanical bending tests demonstrate robust flexibility: the PEAI-passivated cells retain ~85–90% of their initial efficiency after 700 bending cycles (radius ~5 mm), significantly higher than the ~70% retention of unpassivated cells. This work showcases that integrating a PEAI surface treatment with optimized electron (SnO2) and hole (spiro-OMeTAD) transport layers (ETL and HTL) can simultaneously enhance the efficiency and mechanical durability of FPSCs. These findings pave the way for more reliable and high-performance flexible solar cells for wearable and portable energy applications. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Solar Energy and Solar Cells)
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