Textile Materials for Wireless Energy Harvesting

Wireless energy harvesting, a technique to generate direct current (DC) electricity from ambient wireless signals, has recently been featured as a potential solution to reduce the battery size, extend the battery life, or replace batteries altogether for wearable electronics. Unlike other energy har...

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Published in:Electronic Materials
Main Author: Yusuke Yamada
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2022-10-01
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2673-3978/3/4/26
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author Yusuke Yamada
author_facet Yusuke Yamada
author_sort Yusuke Yamada
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container_title Electronic Materials
description Wireless energy harvesting, a technique to generate direct current (DC) electricity from ambient wireless signals, has recently been featured as a potential solution to reduce the battery size, extend the battery life, or replace batteries altogether for wearable electronics. Unlike other energy harvesting techniques, wireless energy harvesting has a prominent advantage of ceaseless availability of ambient signals, but the common form of technology involves a major challenge of limited output power because of a relatively low ambient energy density. Moreover, the archetypal wireless energy harvesters are made of printed circuit boards (PCBs), which are rigid, bulky, and heavy, and hence they are not eminently suitable for body-worn applications from both aesthetic and comfort points of view. In order to overcome these limitations, textile-based wireless energy harvesting architectures have been proposed in the past decade. Being made of textile materials, this new class of harvesters can be seamlessly integrated into clothing in inherently aesthetic and comfortable forms. In addition, since clothing offers a large surface area, multiple harvesting units can be deployed to enhance the output power. In view of these unique and irreplaceable benefits, this paper reviews key recent progress in textile-based wireless energy harvesting strategies for powering body-worn electronics. Comparisons with other power harvesting technologies, historical development, fundamental principles of operation and techniques for fabricating textile-based wireless power harvesters are first recapitulated, followed by a review on the principal advantages, challenges, and opportunities. It is one of the purposes of this paper to peruse the current state-of-the-art and build a scientific knowledge base to aid further advancement of power solutions for wearable electronics.
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spelling doaj-art-d28ca1d9dc7d47e080c8ed7d4beca8732025-08-19T23:12:03ZengMDPI AGElectronic Materials2673-39782022-10-013430133110.3390/electronicmat3040026Textile Materials for Wireless Energy HarvestingYusuke Yamada0Yamada Shoten, Osaka 556-0001, JapanWireless energy harvesting, a technique to generate direct current (DC) electricity from ambient wireless signals, has recently been featured as a potential solution to reduce the battery size, extend the battery life, or replace batteries altogether for wearable electronics. Unlike other energy harvesting techniques, wireless energy harvesting has a prominent advantage of ceaseless availability of ambient signals, but the common form of technology involves a major challenge of limited output power because of a relatively low ambient energy density. Moreover, the archetypal wireless energy harvesters are made of printed circuit boards (PCBs), which are rigid, bulky, and heavy, and hence they are not eminently suitable for body-worn applications from both aesthetic and comfort points of view. In order to overcome these limitations, textile-based wireless energy harvesting architectures have been proposed in the past decade. Being made of textile materials, this new class of harvesters can be seamlessly integrated into clothing in inherently aesthetic and comfortable forms. In addition, since clothing offers a large surface area, multiple harvesting units can be deployed to enhance the output power. In view of these unique and irreplaceable benefits, this paper reviews key recent progress in textile-based wireless energy harvesting strategies for powering body-worn electronics. Comparisons with other power harvesting technologies, historical development, fundamental principles of operation and techniques for fabricating textile-based wireless power harvesters are first recapitulated, followed by a review on the principal advantages, challenges, and opportunities. It is one of the purposes of this paper to peruse the current state-of-the-art and build a scientific knowledge base to aid further advancement of power solutions for wearable electronics.https://www.mdpi.com/2673-3978/3/4/26wireless power harvestingtextile-based energy solutionself-sustainable wearable electronicshigh-frequency circuit designelectrical and dielectric properties
spellingShingle Yusuke Yamada
Textile Materials for Wireless Energy Harvesting
wireless power harvesting
textile-based energy solution
self-sustainable wearable electronics
high-frequency circuit design
electrical and dielectric properties
title Textile Materials for Wireless Energy Harvesting
title_full Textile Materials for Wireless Energy Harvesting
title_fullStr Textile Materials for Wireless Energy Harvesting
title_full_unstemmed Textile Materials for Wireless Energy Harvesting
title_short Textile Materials for Wireless Energy Harvesting
title_sort textile materials for wireless energy harvesting
topic wireless power harvesting
textile-based energy solution
self-sustainable wearable electronics
high-frequency circuit design
electrical and dielectric properties
url https://www.mdpi.com/2673-3978/3/4/26
work_keys_str_mv AT yusukeyamada textilematerialsforwirelessenergyharvesting