“…It has been demonstrated to have enormous applications in electronic, optoelectronic, electrochemical, and electromechanical devices [3][4][5][6][7][8], such as ultraviolet (UV) lasers [9,10], light-emitting diodes [11], field emission devices [12][13][14], high performance nanosensors [15][16][17], solar cells [18][19][20][21], piezoelectric nanogenerators [22][23][24], and nanopiezotronics [25][26][27]. One-dimensional (1D) ZnO nanostructures have been synthesized by a wide range of techniques, such as wet chemical methods [28][29][30], physical vapor deposition [31][32][33], metal-organic chemical vapor deposition (MOCVD) [34][35][36], molecular beam epitaxy (MBE) [37], pulsed laser deposition [38,39], sputtering [40], flux methods [41], eletrospinning [42][43][44], and even top-down approaches by etching [45]. Among those techniques, physical vapor deposition and flux methods usually require high temperature, and easily incorporate catalysts or impurities into the...…”