HomeNewsIndia NewsSolar cells powered Wearables works in water also

    Solar cells powered Wearables works in water also

    Organic solar cells that are waterproof and stretchable could someday be sewn into washable electronic clothing. Researchers in Japan describe fabricating and testing several of these cells today in the journal Nature Energy.

    The group, led by Takao Someya at the RIKEN Center for Emergent Matter Science in Saitama, Japan, says such cells could be used in health monitors woven into a patient’s clothing to analyze their heartbeat and body temperature, and help spot early warning signs of medical problems.

    Wearable devices need a steady power supply of several milliwatts or more to continuously collect data. Ideally, such power sources would be woven into wearable textiles to harvest solar and other forms of energy from the environment, say Someya and his colleagues.

    Energy-harvesting textiles should not only collect energy efficiently and be highly stretchable, but they should also prove stable in both air and water. However, achieving all three of these features at the same time remains difficult because the ultra-thin stretchable materials that scientists want to use to harvest energy are often permeable. As such, they can easily be ruined by oxygen, water vapor, and liquid water, the researchers say.

    Now Someya and his colleagues have developed stretchy, flexible organic solar cells with a high energy conversion efficiency of 7.9 percent, generating 7.86 milliwatts of power per square centimeter under simulated sunlight of 100 milliwatts per square centimeter. This efficiency only decreased by 5.4 percent after the cells were immersed in water for two hours. Moreover, the efficiency of the cells remained at 80 percent of the original value even after 20 cycles of washing that compressed them to roughly half their size and exposed them to water for 100 minutes.

    The cells were made of a material called PNTz4T that the researchers developed in earlier work. They were coated on both sides with 1-micron-thick layers of parylene that acts as a barrier to oxygen, water vapor, and liquid water. This roughly 3-micron-thick stack was then laminated between two pre-stretched acrylic-based elastic materials that were each 500 microns thick to further protect against water.

    “Our solar cells can easily be attached onto clothes,” says study co-author Kenjiro Fukuda at the RIKEN Center for Emergent Matter Science. “As textile-compatible power sources, our washable, lightweight, and stretchable organic photovoltaics will open a new avenue for use as a long-term power source system for wearables, electronic textiles, and other sensors for the Internet of Things in the future.”

    The elastomers, or elastic materials, the researchers used were simple, commercially available ones. Future research could use other elastomers to further improve performance, Fukuda says

    Source: IEEE Spectrum

    ELE Times Bureau
    ELE Times Bureauhttps://www.eletimes.ai/
    ELE Times provides a comprehensive global coverage of Electronics, Technology and the Market. In addition to providing in depth articles, ELE Times attracts the industry’s largest, qualified and highly engaged audiences, who appreciate our timely, relevant content and popular formats. ELE Times helps you build awareness, drive traffic, communicate your offerings to right audience, generate leads and sell your products better.

    Related News

    Must Read

    Cadence to deliver pre-validated chiplet solutions to Accelerate Chiplet Time to Market

    Cadence announced a Chiplet Spec-to-Packaged Parts ecosystem to reduce...

    Microchip Releases Custom Firmware For NVIDIA DGX Spark For Its MEC1723 Embedded Controllers

    Microchip Technology announced the release of custom-designed firmware for...

    Infineon and HL Klemove collaborate to advance innovation for SDVs

    Infineon Technologies AG and HL Klemove aim to strengthen...

    Fluentgrid Completes Wirepas Certified HES Integration, Joining The Growing Ecosystem For Smart Electricity Metering

    Fluentgrid Ltd., a leading provider of utility digitalisation platforms...

    Cadence Reinforces Long-Term R&D Commitment, Celebrating 20 years in Pune

    Cadence, a global leader in electronic system design, celebrated...

    Redefining Edge Computing: How the STM32V8 18nm Node Outperforms Legacy 40nm MCUs

    STMicroelectronics held a virtual media briefing, hosted by Patrick...