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Review-Human-Body Powered Biosensing Textiles: Body-Power Generating Wearables Based on Textiles for Human Biomonitoring

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ELECTROCHEMICAL SOC INC
DOI: 10.1149/1945-7111/ac72c3

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  1. Ministry of Education, Culture, Research, and Technology of The Republic of Indonesia [2/AMD/E1/KP.PTNBH/2020]
  2. KMU-innovative project 'Einzelpunkt-Sensorsystem fur die nicht-invasive, dynamische Messung der Herzfunktion' of the Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF) Germany [FKZ: 13GW0180B]

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The rise of wearable technology has shifted health monitoring from clinical to personal use. Smart wearables collect physiological signals and assist in health analysis. The development of multifunctional devices demands alternative energy sources, such as human-body-powered biosensing textiles (HBBTs). HBBTs harvest energy from the human body and can potentially work without batteries, providing multifunctional health monitoring.
The rise of wearable technology has gradually shifted modern health monitoring from clinical to personal use. Smart wearables can collect physiological signals and show them directly on a smartphone. In contemporary healthcare scenarios, this big data could aid medical doctors in online health analysis. Most currently available wearables are designed to monitor specific health parameters, while the combination of many devices is practically not convenient and not cost-effective. Therefore, a strong trend is towards the development of multifunctional devices. This demands, however, alternative sources of power other than conventional batteries. The concept of human-body-powered biosensing textiles (HBBTs) addresses this challenge. By harvesting energy produced from the human body such as motion, pressure, vibration, heat, and metabolites and converting them into electricity, HBBTs could potentially work without a battery. Additionally, the textiles themselves provide a suitable substrate for interconnects and biosensors, such that a system based on HBBTs could provide multifunctional health monitoring. This review explains the fundamental theories, the classification, the energy-conversion efficiency assessment, and the possible biomonitoring applications of HBBTs. Furthermore, we discuss the challenges for technology maturity and the perspectives of HBBTs in shaping the future of health monitoring. (C) 2022 The Author(s). Published on behalf of The Electrochemical Society by IOP Publishing Limited.

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