If you thought that electricity-generating knee brace thing announced last week in the journal Science by researchers at Simon Fraser University in British Columbia
looked like too much work, take heart. With any luck, we may soon be
able to get watts out of our waistcoats. Or sweaters. Or shirts, all
without moving a muscle. It's the best thing to happen to textiles
since wash-‘n-wear.
The knee-mounted generator captures energy from leg muscles. But you
still have to walk to generate the five watts of electricity per leg
that the scientists calculate as the device’s output, or 13 watts if
your get a move on—enough for 30 minutes of talk time on a mobile
phone. The inventors, led by Max Donelan, think the device could
replace the 30-odd pounds of batteries that U.S. soldiers typically
carry to operate their electronic gear. But as I say, you still gotta
walk.
Now nanotechnology researchers are announcing fabrics that scavenge
mechanical energy from sources as leisurely as heartbeats and ambient
noise, and turn it into electricity. Call it the ultimate power suit.
It works like this: start with synthetic Kevlar fibers from DuPont
and coat them with tetraethoxysilane and crystals of zinc oxide. Zinc
oxide is what’s called piezoelectric:
when stressed by moving, it produces a voltage. Zhong Lin Wang of the
Georgia Institute of Technology and colleagues intertwine the fibers
into yarn, so that when the fibers rub against one another charge,
builds up on the bristles. “The two fibers scrub together just like two
bottle brushes with their bristles touching, and the
piezoelectric-semiconductor process converts the mechanical motion into
electrical energy,” he explains. An output wire carries the resulting
current to any device you like, including a battery if you want to
store it.
Here’s the beauty part, as Wang and colleagues report today in the journal Nature.
Because the fibers are so small (nano, after all), even the slightest
oscillation moves them—a heartbeat, a light breeze, reaching out for a
poolside drink. The whole thing can be scaled up into power tents or
curtains. How much juice are we talking about? Wang estimates the
output at up to 80 milliwatts per square meter of fabric, enough to run
personal electronics off your shirt.
“The fiber-based nanogenerator would be a simple and economical way
to harvest energy from physical movement,” said Wang. “If we can
combine many of these fibers in double or triple layers in clothing, we
could provide a flexible, foldable and wearable power source that, for
example, would allow people to generate their own electrical current.”
He added, “. . . while walking”—but clearly that much exertion is not
necessary. Just position yourself poolside in a light breeze, and
you’re good to go.
Biggest challenge LabNotes sees? Washing your power shirt. Zinc
oxide doesn’t like to get wet, so the fabric would have to be
dry-cleaned.