4.8 Article

Waterproof, Breathable, and Antibacterial Self-Powered e-Textiles Based on Omniphobic Triboelectric Nanogenerators

Journal

ADVANCED FUNCTIONAL MATERIALS
Volume 29, Issue 42, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/adfm.201904350

Keywords

energy harvesting; e-textiles; omniphobic fabric; self-powered wearable interfaces; triboelectric nanogenerators

Funding

  1. Purdue University

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Multifunctional electronic textiles (e-textiles) incorporating miniaturized electronic devices will pave the way toward a new generation of wearable devices and human-machine interfaces. Unfortunately, the development of e-textiles is subject to critical challenges, such as battery dependence, breathability, satisfactory washability, and compatibility with mass production techniques. This work describes a simple and cost-effective method to transform conventional garments and textiles into waterproof, breathable, and antibacterial e-textiles for self-powered human-machine interfacing. Combining embroidery with the spray-based deposition of fluoroalkylated organosilanes and highly networked nanoflakes, omniphobic triboelectric nanogenerators (R-F-TENGs) can be incorporated into any fiber-based textile to power wearable devices using energy harvested from human motion. R-F-TENGs are thin, flexible, breathable (air permeability 90.5 mm s(-1)), inexpensive to fabricate (<0.04$ cm(-2)), and capable of producing a high power density (600 mu W cm(-2)). E-textiles based on R-F-TENGs repel water, stains, and bacterial growth, and show excellent stability under mechanical deformations and remarkable washing durability under standard machine-washing tests. Moreover, e-textiles based on R-F-TENGs are compatible with large-scale production processes and exhibit high sensitivity to touch, enabling the cost-effective manufacturing of wearable human-machine interfaces.

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