Energy harvesting and saving technologies are a primary research focus of the BioCom4SavEn project. We are looking for alternative ways to power small electronic devices. Here, piezoelectric materials, especially polymers, have received increasing attention because of their low manufacturing cost, sufficient power output, and the possibility of producing very flexible forms with low density. Polyvinylidene fluoride (PVDF), one of the most essential piezoelectric polymers, found a lot of research interest in powering smart electronic and sensor devices autonomously. We showed that electrospun PVDF mats and fibers with enhanced piezoelectric phase content can generate electrical potential. Fiber production, such as electrospinning, requires the best parameters; thus, we show the solvents' importance and the incorporation of reduced graphene oxide (rGO) filler for increased piezoelectric coefficient and output power generation. Remarkably, adding 1wt% of rGO enhances the power density output by approximately 5 times higher than the pristine PVDF.
Polymer fiber composites can be very useful for thermal management, especially in thermal insulation, and after the addition of active filler, their thermal conductivity can be improved.
Electrospun nanofibers are also used to produce yarns, not only mats and membranes. In the BioCom4SavEn project, yarn based on composite polyimide (PI) nanofibers with silicon nitride (SiN) were applied as coatings on resistance wires. The highest concentration of SiN (35wt%) in PI nanofibers exhibited the highest increase in the surface temperature analyzed via scanning thermal microscopy (SThM), thus showing a great promise for effective heat dissipation materials in thermal management applications.
All the abovementioned results were presented at several international conferences.