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Scooped by
Richard Platt
onto Wearable Tech and the Internet of Things (Iot) October 18, 2022 10:38 PM
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Researchers at Nottingham Trent University have invented textiles embedded with more than a thousand miniature solar cells that can charge a smart watch or mobile phone, according to a press release by the institution published on Thursday. The Nottingham School of Art & Design and has led the development of a woven textile equipped with 1,200 photovoltaic cells with a capacity to harness 400 milliwatts (mWatts) of electrical energy from the sun and can be easily incorporated into a piece of clothing such as a jacket or used as part of an accessory such as a backpack. The textiles are engineered to handle the same forces as everyday clothing and can even be washed in a machine at 40°C with other laundry without being damaged. The tiny solar cells measure a mere 5 mm in length and 1.5 mm in width. They are further embedded in a waterproof polymer resin; and they cannot be felt by the wearer, which means they are comfortable and practical to wear. “Until now very few people would have considered that their clothing or textiles products could be used for generating electricity. And the material which we have developed, for all intents and purposes, appears and behaves the same as any ordinary textile, as it can be scrunched up and washed in a machine.”
“But hidden beneath the surface is a network of more than a thousand tiny photovoltaic cells which can harness the sun’s energy to charge personal devices.” “Electronic textiles really have the potential to change people’s relationship with technology, as this prototype shows how we could do away with charging many devices at the wall.”