Fiber-Based Generator for Wearable Electronics and Mobile Medication
Article 2014 en
Authors
JZ
Junwen Zhong
YZ
Yan Zhang
QZ
Qize Zhong
Abstract
1 min read
Smart garments for monitoring physiological and biomechanical signals of the human body are key sensors for personalized healthcare. However, they typically require bulky battery packs or have to be plugged into an electric plug in order to operate. Thus, a smart shirt that can extract energy from human body motions to run body-worn healthcare sensors is particularly desirable. Here, we demonstrated a metal-free fiber-based generator (FBG) via a simple, cost-effective method by using commodity cotton threads, a polytetrafluoroethylene aqueous suspension, and carbon nanotubes as source materials. The FBGs can convert biomechanical motions/vibration energy into electricity utilizing the electrostatic effect with an average output power density of ∼0.1 μW/cm2 and have been identified as an effective building element for a power shirt to trigger a wireless body temperature sensor system. Furthermore, the FBG was demonstrated as a self-powered active sensor to quantitatively detect human motion.
Thomas Geernaert, Tomasz Nasiłowski, Karima Chah, Martin Becker, Manfred Rothhardt, M. Szpulak, Jacek Olszewski, Krzysztof Poturaj, Jan Wójcik, Wacław Urbańczyk, Herman Terryn, Hartmut Bartelt, Francis Berghmans, Hugo Thienpont
Proceedings of SPIE, the International Society for Optical Engineering/Proceedings of SPIE
Discussion(0)
No comments yet. Be the first to comment.