• Log in with Facebook Log in with Twitter Log In with Google      Sign In    
  • Create Account
  LongeCity
              Advocacy & Research for Unlimited Lifespans


Adverts help to support the work of this non-profit organisation. To go ad-free join as a Member.


Photo
- - - - -

T-Shirt replaces battery


  • Please log in to reply
1 reply to this topic

#1 Reno

  • Guest
  • 584 posts
  • 37
  • Location:Somewhere

Posted 18 January 2011 - 11:12 AM


I can't wait for my Tron robe. Between shirts being turned into power generators, and fiber based displays it wouldn't surprise me to see fashion becoming a rather simple thing. I can definitely see lighted shirts for walking around at night, signaling occupational roles.

I read a book by Larry Niven which described people using color to send social messages. Pastel colors signaled a prior commitment. Dark colors signaled no interest in a relationship. Everything else signaled various levels of approachability. I always wondered if our society would be too socially complex for such a simple idea.

Will we soon be plugging our mobile phone into our t-shirt instead of putting in a battery? This vision is not totally out of reach: the first steps in this direction have already been taken.

Now a team led by Zhong Lin Wang at the Georgia Institute of Technology (Atlanta, USA) and Jong Min Kim of Samsung Electronics in South Korea is introducing a prototype for a flexible energy storage device that can be worked into textiles. As the scientists report in the journal Angewandte Chemie International Edition ("Fiber Supercapacitors Made of Nanowire-Fiber Hybrid Structures for Wearable/Flexible Energy Storage"), this supercapacitor is made of a very special arrangement of zinc oxide nanowires grown on conventional fibers.
A wearable and flexible fiber supercapacitor with a fully encapsulated electrolyte is formed by entangling plastic wire covered with ZnO nanowires

Posted ImagePosted Image


Although smaller, lighter components are constantly being developed, most devices for energy generation and storage are much too bulky and heavy for increasingly miniaturized electronic devices of the future. Supercapacitors are an interesting alternative to batteries and rechargeable batteries for energy storage. They can be recharged almost endlessly and extremely fast; however, previous examples have not been flexible or light enough.

The research team has now developed a prototype for a high-efficiency fiber-based electrochemical micro-supercapacitor that uses zinc oxide nanowires as electrodes. The substrate for one of the electrode is a flexible, fine plastic wire; for the other electrode it is a fiber made of Kevlar. Kevlar is the material used to make bulletproof vests. The researchers were able to grow zinc oxide nanowires on each of these substrates. Additional coatings with materials like gold and manganese oxide could further improve the charge capacitance. Using tweezers, the researchers then wrapped each of the plastic wires with a Kevlar fiber. This assembly was then embedded in a solid gel electrolyte that separates the two electrodes and allows for the necessary charge transport. A bundle of these fibers could be processed to form a thread.
Zinc oxide has special advantages over conventional supercapacitor materials,: it can be grown on any desired substrate in any form at low temperature (below 100 °C) and it is both biocompatible and environmentally friendly.

A particularly intriguing application would be the use of these new charge-storage media in combination with flexible fiber nanogenerators, which Wang and his team have previously developed. The wearer's heartbeat and steps, or even a light wind, would be enough to move the piezoelectric zinc oxide nanowires in the fibers, generating electrical current.

In the form of a "power shirt" such a system could deliver enough current for small electronic devices, such as mobile phones or small sensors like those used to warn firemen of toxins.

Source: Wiley


source

#2 valkyrie_ice

  • Guest
  • 837 posts
  • 142
  • Location:Monteagle, TN

Posted 19 January 2011 - 04:45 AM

*giggle* Reno, you beat me to the punch again! Good job!

Now, add in an inductive power transmitter to run a pair of wraparound video lenses, earbuds, and embed your smartphone into the arm of the outfit. Toss in whatever other sensors you want as well.

Wanna bet we see "convergence" come to have a whole new meaning when we can have clothing that is also a computer?

Tron clothes are just the tip of the iceberg. Having an outfit that can change color at a whim, via printed displays on it, will definitely follow in short order. Computer clothes could be by the mid to late decade.

Edited by valkyrie_ice, 19 January 2011 - 04:47 AM.





0 user(s) are reading this topic

0 members, 0 guests, 0 anonymous users