Litcius/Paper detail

Elastic Multifunctional Liquid–Metal Fibers for Harvesting Mechanical and Electromagnetic Energy and as Self‐Powered Sensors

Ying‐Chih Lai, Hongwei Lu, Hsing‐Mei Wu, Dongguang Zhang, Jiayi Yang, Jinwoo Ma, Mohammad Shamsi, Veenasri Vallem, Michael D. Dickey

2021Advanced Energy Materials195 citationsDOI

Abstract

Abstract Future wearable technologies and personal electronics may benefit from e‐textiles that simultaneously possess high elasticity and multiple capabilities such as energy harvesting and sensing. Here, the first elastic multifunctional fiber that can scavenge mechanical energy from body motion and electromagnetic energy from surrounding electrical appliances is presented. In addition to converting multiple sources of waste energy into electricity, the fibers can also serve as self‐powered tactile and biomechanical sensors. The fibers consist of hollow elastomeric fibers filled with liquid metal. The fibers harvest energy by the combination of triboelectricity (160 V m −1 , 5 µA m −1 , and ≈ 360 µW m −1 ) and induced electrification of the liquid metal (±8 V m −1 (60 Hz), ±1.4 µA m −1 , and ≈ 8 µW m −1 ). The fibers are characterized and their utility for powering electronics and sensing biomechanical information is demonstrated. These fibers are further demonstrated as completely soft and stretchable components for human–machine interfaces, including keypads and wireless music controllers.

Topics & Concepts

Materials scienceEnergy harvestingElectronicsTriboelectric effectContact electrificationWearable technologyWearable computerLiquid metalElectricityMechanical energyFiberComposite materialNanotechnologyEnergy (signal processing)OptoelectronicsElectrical engineeringComputer scienceStatisticsEmbedded systemPower (physics)MathematicsPhysicsQuantum mechanicsEngineeringAdvanced Sensor and Energy Harvesting MaterialsTactile and Sensory InteractionsMuscle activation and electromyography studies