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Power Portables Technology

Energy-Generating Fabric Set To Power Battery-Free Wearables 40

An anonymous reader writes A team of researchers in Korea and Australia have developed a flexible fabric which generates power from human movement – a breakthrough which could replace batteries in future wearable devices. The effect of the fabric's nanogenerators mirrors static electricity with the two fabrics repeatedly brushing against each other and stealing electrons from the one another – this exchange creates energy from the wearer's activity without the need for an external power source. During testing, the researchers demonstrated the nanogenerator powering a number of devices such as LEDs, a liquid crystal display, as well as a keyless car entry system embedded in a nanogenerator 'power suit'.
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Energy-Generating Fabric Set To Power Battery-Free Wearables

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  • 1. You have to wear that specific garment; 2. You have to get the power from the garment to the device. It isn't going to happen. Just give us a better battery.
  • 1. Get swim suit made of magic fabric.
    2. Swim, thereby heating the pool.
    3. Say goodbye to expensive pool-heating bills!

    • Lets spend hundreds of dollars on expensive fabric that that may be ruined in the wash instead of using a 49 cent battery, Lol. I guess fabric softener is out of the question.

    • build a track suit, generate power from running, use this for cooling, stick a little hamster logo on it...

  • by gilgongo ( 57446 ) on Sunday March 08, 2015 @05:07AM (#49208761) Homepage Journal

    While I agree that putting the fabric inside a coat demonstrates a naive view of human factors (you can't wash the coat, you have to wear it all the time, etc.), I wonder if this might simply be the first idea they had after developing the invention?

    Fabric generating power from movement would seem to have applications in other places: sails on boats; flags flying on buildings; tarpaulins on trucks, maybe quite a few others if the fabric is sufficiently robust enough.

    • People typically don't wash coats and typically wear them every day and all the time when they're outside (in winter that is).

    • by gl4ss ( 559668 ) on Sunday March 08, 2015 @09:03AM (#49209205) Homepage Journal

      if it was that efficient, they would have chosen a windmill demonstrator.

      it's not that efficient, so they chose this demonstrator. if it provided enough power to charge a phone, they would have had that on the demonstrator. all their uses could be done with a tiny solar cell.

      • Except that wearables that light up tend to be worn in dark places, so a solar cell won't work. I don't see the nanogenerator fabric being practical for mainstream clothing in the near term but it will be great for costume wearables.
  • I call prior art [wikipedia.org]
  • I know that I'm ruining my karma by posting this, but I'll do it anyway.

    I am sick of those attention whores in Australian universities - those chinese and indians who do whatever they can to attract attention and push their funding agenda. I'm tired of articles like this, that claim a "breakthrough" when there is nothing even remotely near a good, reproducible and insightful science. It must be stopped, but unfortunately this means that a substantial bulk of those pseudoscience schmucks will be thrown awa
  • Corduroy Pants and thigh-mounted thermocouples. Could maybe power a Peltier Chiller all up in there...

  • You want to produce power with clothing? Just bring back cheap polyester clothing. The static discharge alone would power an iWatch.

    Yes, lets call it an iWatch just to piss off apple marketing and branding idiots.

  • I can power all the devices the summary lists with two coins stuck lemon juice or a potato, A mere 1.1 mW? A single "D" alkaline battery would last for a year and a couple months at that power level.

    • by dan42 ( 740934 )
      "the technology still producing electricity after over 12,000 compression and release cycles" So, assuming an average walking speed that's about *2 hours* before you need new pants. Washing the clothes would most definitely wear them out! And think about what detergent would do to this...

I THINK THEY SHOULD CONTINUE the policy of not giving a Nobel Prize for paneling. -- Jack Handley, The New Mexican, 1988.

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