Abstract

The development of special wearable/portable electronic devices for health monitoring is rapidly growing to cope with different health parameters. The emergence of wearable devices and its growing demand has widened the scope of self‐powered wearable devices with the possibility to eliminate batteries. For instance, the wearable thermoelectric energy harvester (TEEH) is an alternate to batteries, which has been used in this study to develop four different self‐powered wearable jacket prototypes and experimentally validated. It is observed that the thermal resistance of the cold side without a heat sink of prototype 4 is much greater than the rest of the proposed prototypes. Besides that, the thermal resistance of prototype 4 heat sinks is even lower among all proposed prototypes. Therefore, prototype 4 would have a relatively higher heat transfer coefficient which results in improved power generation. Moreover, an increase in heat transfer coefficient is observed with an increase in the temperature difference of the cold and hot sides of a TEEH. Thus, on the cold side, a heat flow increases which benefits heat dissipation and in turn reduces the thermal resistance of the heat sink. Besides that, the developed prototypes on people show that power generation is also affected by factors like ambient temperature, person’s activity, and wind breeze and does not depend on the metabolism. A different mechanism has been explored to maximize the power output within a 16.0 cm2 area, in order to justify the wearability of the energy harvester. Furthermore, it is observed that during the sunlight, any material covering the TEEH would improve the performance of prototypes. Prototypes are integrated into jacket and studied extensively. The TEEH system was designed to produce a maximum delivering power and power density of 699.71 μW and 43.73 μW/cm2, respectively. Moreover, the maximum voltage produced is 62.6 mV at an optimal load of 5.6 Ω. Furthermore, the TEEH (prototype 4) is connected to a power management circuit of ECT310 and LTC3108 and has been able to power 18 LEDs.

Highlights

  • Thermoelectric energy harvesters (TEEHs) can convert heat energy into electricity based on the Seebeck effect

  • TEEHs without a heat sink, with a copper foam and plate fin heat sink comparison, show that foam as a heat sink could reduce the thermal resistance at the cold side, which increased the temperature difference and output voltage generation

  • The drawback of wearable thermoelectric energy harvester (TEEH) is that the human thermal resistance depends on a heat flow of a TEEH in contact with the human skin

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Summary

Introduction

Thermoelectric energy harvesters (TEEHs) can convert heat energy into electricity based on the Seebeck effect In this case, the motion of charge carriers (electrons and holes) leads to a temperature difference across the device [1]. Wearable TEEH is an appropriate energy harvesting technology for power generation from the human body to operate wearable electronic devices. TEEHs without a heat sink, with a copper foam and plate fin heat sink comparison, show that foam as a heat sink could reduce the thermal resistance at the cold side, which increased the temperature difference and output voltage generation. The drawback of wearable thermoelectric energy harvester (TEEH) is that the human thermal resistance depends on a heat flow of a TEEH in contact with the human skin. It is observed that during the sunlight, any material covering of the TEEH would improve the performance of prototypes

Modeling of TEEHs
Development of a Self-Powered Jacket
Experimental Characterization
DC Power Control from the Developed TEEHs
Environmental Effect
Comparative Analysis
Findings
Conclusion
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