Abstract
Flexible piezoelectric materials demonstrate broad application potential in wearable health monitoring, human-machine interaction, and biosensing. However, the piezoelectric response of pure PVDF-TrFE is limited and insufficient to meet the requirements for highly sensitive sensing. In this study, ZnO/PVDF-TrFE composite films with varying ZnO doping contents (3-11 wt%) were fabricated and systematically characterized in terms of their structural, thermal, and electrical properties. The results indicate that ZnO significantly promotes the formation of the polar β-phase in PVDF-TrFE, with the maximum β-phase content (F(β) = 24.76%) and optimal piezoelectric performance achieved at 9 wt% ZnO doping. Devices based on this optimal composition exhibited stable ultrasonic transmission and reception capabilities under high-frequency pulse excitation, enabling sensitive detection of minor static pressure variations (e.g., contact pressure) through changes in ultrasonic echo signals, thereby realizing wearable conformity monitoring. Moreover, a sensor designed with a three-channel flexible substrate successfully captured human wrist pulse signals with high accuracy, demonstrating the practical utility and reliability of the device in flexible bio-electronic sensing applications.