Abstract
Recent advances in ubiquitous low-power electronics call for the development of light-weight and flexible energy sources. The textile format is highly attractive for unobtrusive harvesting of energy from e.g., biomechanical movements. Here, we report the manufacture and characterisation of fully textile piezoelectric generators that can operate under wet conditions. We use a weaving loom to realise textile bands with yarns of melt-spun piezoelectric microfibres, that consist of a conducting core surrounded by β-phase poly(vinylidene fluoride) (PVDF), in the warp direction. The core-sheath constitution of the piezoelectric microfibres results in a—for electronic textiles—unique architecture. The inner electrode is fully shielded from the outer electrode (made up of conducting yarns that are integrated in the weft direction) which prevents shorting under wet conditions. As a result, and in contrast to other energy harvesting textiles, we are able to demonstrate piezoelectric fabrics that do not only continue to function when in contact with water, but show enhanced performance. The piezoelectric bands generate an output of several volts at strains below one percent. We show that integration into the shoulder strap of a laptop case permits the continuous generation of four microwatts of power during a brisk walk. This promising performance, combined with the fact that our solution uses scalable materials and well-established industrial manufacturing methods, opens up the possibility to develop wearable electronics that are powered by piezoelectric textiles.
Highlights
Textiles are an ideal format for low-power electronics that promise to enrich every aspect of life from fashion, functional clothing and medical care to interior design and technical textiles
Etextile generators should be fabricated with processing methods that are familiar to the textile industry
We evaluated three types of commercial conducting yarns: a polyamide yarn coated with carbon black-particles (PAcarbon black), a polyamide yarn commingled with 20% thin stainless steel staple fibres (PA ), steel and a silver plated polyamide yarn (PAsilver)
Summary
Textiles are an ideal format for low-power electronics that promise to enrich every aspect of life from fashion, functional clothing and medical care to interior design and technical textiles. The piezoelectric textile constitutes a load-bearing component that provides an output voltage of up to 8 V per step under wet conditions, as water enhances the electrical contact surface area between fibres.
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