Self-powered textile for wearable electronics by hybridizing fiber-shaped nanogenerators, solar cells, and supercapacitors
Georgia Institute of Technology · Soochow University · +5 more institutions
Abstract
Wearable electronics fabricated on lightweight and flexible substrate are believed to have great potential for portable devices, but their applications are limited by the life span of their batteries. We propose a hybridized self-charging power textile system with the aim of simultaneously collecting outdoor sunshine and random body motion energies and then storing them in an energy storage unit. Both of the harvested energies can be easily converted into electricity by using fiber-shaped dye-sensitized solar cells (for solar energy) and fiber-shaped triboelectric nanogenerators (for random body motion energy) and then further stored as chemical energy in fiber-shaped supercapacitors. Because of the…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 47.59
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 46
Authors
13- ZWZhen WenCorresponding
Georgia Institute of Technology, Soochow University, Zhejiang University
- MYMin‐Hsin YehCorresponding
Georgia Institute of Technology, National Taiwan University of Science and Technology
- HGHengyu GuoCorresponding
Georgia Institute of Technology, Chongqing University
- JWJie Wang
Georgia Institute of Technology
- YZYunlong Zi
Georgia Institute of Technology
Topics & keywords
- Supercapacitor
- Wearable technology
- Electronics
- Wearable computer
- Nanotechnology
- Materials science
- Textile
- Fiber
- Affordable and clean energy