A polymer-based textile thermoelectric generator for wearable energy harvesting
Journal article, 2020

Conducting polymers offer new opportunities to design soft, conformable and light-weight thermoelectric textile generators that can be unobtrusively integrated into garments or upholstery. Using the widely available conducting polymer:polyelectrolyte complex poly(3,4-ethylenedioxythiophene):poly(styrene sulfonate) (PEDOT:PSS) as the p-type material, we have prepared an electrically conducting sewing thread, which we then embroidered into thick wool fabrics to form out-of-plane thermoelectric textile generators. The influence of device design is discussed in detail, and we show that the performance of e-textile devices can be accurately predicted and optimized using modeling developed for conventional thermoelectric systems, provided that the electrical and thermal contact resistances are included in the model. Finally, we demonstrate a thermoelectric textile device that can generate a, for polymer-based devices, unprecedented power of 1.2 μW at a temperature gradient ΔT of 65 K, and over 0.2 μW at a more modest ΔT of 30 K.

Organic electronics

Thermoelectrics

E-Textiles

Energy harvesting

Author

Anja Lund

Chalmers, Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, Applied Chemistry

Yuan Tian

Student at Chalmers

Sozan Darabi

Wallenberg Wood Science Center (WWSC)

Chalmers, Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, Applied Chemistry

Christian Müller

Wallenberg Wood Science Center (WWSC)

Chalmers, Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, Applied Chemistry

Journal of Power Sources

0378-7753 (ISSN)

Vol. 480 228836

Woven and 3D-Printed Thermoelectric Textiles (ThermoTex)

European Research Council (ERC) (637624), 2015-06-01 -- 2020-06-30.

Subject Categories

Aerospace Engineering

Textile, Rubber and Polymeric Materials

Other Electrical Engineering, Electronic Engineering, Information Engineering

DOI

10.1016/j.jpowsour.2020.228836

More information

Latest update

2/23/2021