[dropcap style=”font-size:100px; color:#992211;”]R[/dropcap]eplacing batteries may become a thing of the past, thanks to ‘soft generators’
Battery technology hasn’t kept pace with advancements in portable electronics, but the race is on to fix this. One revolutionary concept being pursued by a team of researchers in New Zealand involves creating “wearable energy harvesters” capable of converting movement from humans or found in nature into battery power.
“Imagine soft generators that produce energy by flexing and stretching as they ride ocean waves or sway in the breeze like a tree,” says Thomas McKay, a Ph.D. candidate working on soft generator research at the Biomimetics Lab. “We’ve developed a low-cost power generator with an unprecedented combination of softness, flexibility, and low mass. These characteristics provide an opportunity to harvest energy from environmental sources with much greater simplicity than previously possible.”
Dielectric elastomers, often referred to as artificial muscles, are stretchy materials that are capable of producing energy when deformed. In the past, artificial muscle generators required bulky, rigid, and expensive external electronics.
“Our team eliminated the need for this external circuitry by integrating flexible electronics—dielectric elastomer switches—directly onto the artificial muscles themselves. One of the most exciting features of the generator is that it’s so simple; it simply consists of rubber membranes and carbon grease mounted in a frame,” McKay explains.
McKay and his colleagues at the Biomimetics Lab are working to create soft dexterous machines that comfortably interface with living creatures and nature in general. The soft generator is another step toward fully soft devices; it could potentially be unnoticeably incorporated into clothing and harvest electricity from human movement. When this happens, worrying about the battery powering your cell phone or other portable electronics dying on you will become a thing of the past. And as an added bonus, this should help keep batteries out of landfills.
The aim of art is to represent not the outward appearance of things, but their inward significance. – Aristotle