Abstract

Wearable thermoelectric (TE), enabling direct conversion of human body heat into electricity have become the most promising alternative for conventional batteries on the Internet of Things based wearable electronic devices. The prime challenge in fabricating a high-performance wearable thermoelectric material is to combine the non-toxicity with high mechanical flexibility, excellent electrical conductivity and high Seebeck coefficient. This paper proposes a facile approach to fabricate a textile-based wearable thermoelectric generator (WTEG) with outstanding TE properties and exceptional flexibility. Herein, molybdenum disulphide (MoS2) nanosheets were grown on conductive carbon fabric (CF) via in-situ binder-free hydrothermal technique and manganese dioxide (MnO2) nanorods were decorated on it via dip coating, to form a 1D/2D interface. We investigated the in-plane TE properties of MnO2/MoS2/CF and achieved a superior power factor of 548.7 nW/mK2 which is 49.5 % higher than that of the pristine MoS2/CF. Such behaviour can be explained by the selective transmission of high energy carriers at the optimized MnO2/MoS2 interface. Moreover, this study is the first to employ a textile-based contact electrode in fabrication of WTEG that resulted in ultra-low internal resistance of the fabricated device (30–300 Ω). The lack of rigid contact electrodes leaves more flexibility, which benefits in enhanced wearability of the device. Owing to minimal internal resistance (29.4 Ω), the WTEG comprising of 1 -n/p pair could produce an open circuit voltage, as high as 0.2 mV under the thermal gradient of 15–20 K. Additionally, we demonstrated that increasing the number of modules from 1 pair to 4 pairs systematically improved the device performance. The open circuit voltage and output power generated for WTEG comprising of 4 -n/p pairs is measured to be 1.2 mV and 1 nW, respectively. This work provides a feasible design solution for a low resistance, rigid-free WTEGs with high performance which can significantly support the growth of research in wearable thermoelectrics.

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