EPSRC-SFI: Next Generation Energy Autonomous Textile Fabrics based on Triboelectric Nanogenerators (NextGenT-TENG)

Lead Research Organisation: University of Glasgow
Department Name: School of Engineering

Abstract

In recent years there has been a major surge in the use of wearable electronic devices & sensors (such as fitness monitors, smart watches, electrocardiogram (ECG) sensors etc.). The last decade has led to major advances in the capability of wearable systems; however, performance enhancement inevitably leads to miniaturisation of electronics meaning more sensors and increased power requirements going forward. At present, there is an urgent need to provide a sufficient and autonomous source of clean power to avoid dependence on cumbersome & environmentally unfriendly battery packs. The textile triboelectric nano generator (T-TENG) offers a solution. Triboelectric nano generators (TENGs) use the cyclic contact of two suitably chosen surfaces to convert mechanical energy to electrical energy. T-TENGs are simply TENGs where the tribo-contact materials are incorporated into wearable textiles capable of converting energy in human motions such as daily walking & arm movements into electricity. At present; however, T-TENG performance lags significantly behind that of conventional bulk TENGs and is insufficient to power most e-textile systems.
This project will develop a next generation of high performance textile triboelectric nano generator capable of meeting the current and future energy requirements of wearable systems. It will also develop technology to incorporate the T-TENG in fully integrated energy autonomous fabrics.
We will achieve this step-change in T-TENG performance via the following approach. First, the problem is intensely multidisciplinary and this has previously hampered development of a full picture. Therefore, this project unties the fields of electronic engineering, tribology, materials chemistry, and textiles technology to create the capability required to understand all key aspects of device performance. Next, recognising the need for a rigorous scientific foundation for device design, we will develop a fundamental understanding of the underlying physics of the tribo-contact of textiles. This will culminate in a predictive model for device performance accounting for both the mechanics and electrostatics of the T-TENG. We know that output is hugely linked to the amount of tribo-change density that can be developed at the interface. Here, we contend that maximising difference in election affinity (i.e. between the tribo-materials) and contact area will be critical. Therefore, we will optimise the materials, fibre architecture and surface topography of the textiles to maximise these two key parameters. On interface materials, we will implement the use of material pairs with maximum difference in electron affinity. This will take the form of metal oxide coated fibres in contact with conventional textile fibres such as polyester and polypropylene. On fibre architecture, we will use our predictive T-TENG model to design a fibre architecture that maximises contact area. On surface topography, we will pioneer the use of branching nano filaments or nano pillars to further enhance contact area. To implement these coatings and surface features on textile fabrics, the project will develop a number of novel processing techniques. All of these aspects will then be united in a single device design which will be further modified and refined. The optimised T-TENG will then be fully integrated with a textile based sensor system to form a fully energy autonomous fabric. Finally, a technology demonstrator will be built to demonstrate output performance to both academia & industry. We will work closely with our industrial partners Kyrima & Pireta who are both highly experienced in developing new technologies for the e-textiles industry. A successful outcome would mean that a host of wearable systems in the medical and entertainment sectors could be powered using a clean and free source of energy: that of simple everyday human motion.

Planned Impact

The project will develop a next generation wearable textile triboelectric nano generator (T-TENG) technology capable of powering current & future wearable electronic devices & sensors. It will also develop the technology for realising energy autonomous sensing fabrics based on T-TENGs. The power requirements of wearable & portable systems is rising rapidly due to densification of electronics. The technology developed here will replace cumbersome battery packs and provide a continuous free source of energy derived from human movement. This will have a major impact on health & well-being as the new technology would be in a position to autonomously power a host of wearable medical & fitness devices and sensors from blood pressure monitors & pacemakers to movement sensors, pulse oximeters & continuous glucose monitors (CGMs). Thus, the technology (in conjunction with AI & machine learning) will play a key role in realising a personalised, preventative and connected health system based on patient monitoring and data collection which will improve outcomes and save money. The technology will also impact on quality of life more generally as it would also be a vital power source for emerging portable communications & entertainment devices such as smart watches & smart glasses. The UK is a leader in gaming & immersive technologies and the boundaries for these industries are also hugely governed by power supply issues. There are also major environmental benefits. Eliminating the need for environmentally harmful batteries and basing the power requirements of the wearables sector on a freely available clean source of power will contribute to a greener environment. The project contributes directly to solving the UK government's Faraday Challenge aimed at finding alternatives to conventional batteries.
The UK is home to a number of small & emerging e-textiles companies exploring new wearable technologies. A new T-TENG technology developed in the UK & Ireland would be a unique opportunity for these businesses to bring forward a new technology. In the first instance, this impact will benefit our project partners Pireta & Kymira who will have the opportunity to work towards the longer term goal of bringing the technology to market. The partners will gain access to valuable university research expertise that will provide immediate opportunities for growth. A wearable power source technology capable of enabling energy autonomous wearable electronic systems would clearly have enormous sales potential globally as the number of wearable devices sold globally is predicted to rise to 289 million by 2023. It has the potential to contribute to UK & Irish GDP & create jobs in the e-textiles sector. The project will uncover the key fundamental science of the T-TENG and develop the design & processing approaches required for industrial practitioners to develop & build similar technologies. In developing the technology, the project will produce a number of highly trained research engineers that will be ideally positioned to drive innovation within the UK & Irish e-textiles sector. The public and public bodies such as UK and Irish national health services (NHS & HSE) will benefit from the programme of engagement activities built into the proposal. This will result in a heightened level of awareness of the growing power requirements of wearable systems, their widespread applications and the possibility of a fully integrated energy autonomous solution via a next generation wearable T-TENG. This creation of technology awareness will ultimately lay the groundwork for uptake of the technology by the public and major stakeholder organisations such as the NHS/HSE. The project will also provide the evidence required to convince both industry & public bodies of the power capabilities of the new T-TENG device. The outcomes will provide an ideal platform for attracting funding & support for higher TRL research aimed at commercialisation.

Publications

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Title Method for in-situ visualisation of contact area in triboelectric nanogenerators 
Description We developed a method that allows for direct visualisation of the real contact area in triboelectric nanogenerators. The approach is summarised in detail in the following paper: Multiscale in-situ quantification of the role of surface roughness and contact area using a novel Mica-PVS triboelectric nanogenerator. C Kumar, J Perris, S Bairagi, G Min, Y Xu, N Gadegaard, DM Mulvihill Nano Energy, 108122 
Type Of Material Improvements to research infrastructure 
Year Produced 2022 
Provided To Others? Yes  
Impact The details of this method have just been made available - but we expect it to enable accurate measurement of triboelectric charge density (something we are working on at the moment). 
URL https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2211285522012009
 
Title Novel approaches for testing triboelectric nanogenerators in normal contact and sliding modes 
Description Novel methods of testing triboelectric nano generators - more accurate control than before - better alignment of surfaces - better and more accurate information on mechanical parameters such as contact force and frequency etc. 
Type Of Material Improvements to research infrastructure 
Year Produced 2022 
Provided To Others? No  
Impact Advances in triboelectric nanogenerator performance and characterization - results yet to be published. 
 
Description Heriot-Watt University 
Organisation Heriot-Watt University
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution Technical discussions and advice
Collaborator Contribution Technical discussions and advice
Impact Yes, it is multi-disciplinary: Textiles Engineering (Heriot-Watt) + Tribology (University of Glasgow) + Electronics (University of Glasgow)
Start Year 2021
 
Description IIT Delhi Textiles Engineering 
Organisation Indian Institute of Technology Delhi
Country India 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution We provide ideas from outside the textile field - (e.g. on mechanics and tribology aspects and indeed on the construction and testing of TENGs)
Collaborator Contribution IIT Delhi provide following: Access to their state of the art textiles engineering facilities (internationally renowned) Access to their extensive textiles expertise
Impact This work is recent and not yet published
Start Year 2023
 
Description IT Sligo 
Organisation Institute of Technology Sligo
Country Ireland 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution Testing of triboelectric nanogenerator samples, advice of device fabrication and instrumentation.
Collaborator Contribution Preparation of samples (and chemical treatment) at IT Sligo to be tested at University of Glasgow
Impact Walden R., Kumar C., Mulvihill D.M. and Pillai S.C. (2022) 'Opportunities and Challenges in Triboelectric Nanogenerator (TENG) based Sustainable Energy Generation Technologies: A Mini-Review', Chemical Engineering Journal Advances, Vol 9. No. 100237. Collaboration is multi-disciplinary: Materials Chemistry (IT Sligo) + Tribology (University of Glasgow) + Electronics (University of Glasgow)
Start Year 2021
 
Description Kymira 
Organisation KYMIRA Sports
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Private 
PI Contribution Technical discussions and advice
Collaborator Contribution Technical discussions and advice plus key insight from the industry wearables sector
Impact Collaboration here is between academia and industry where the technology might be applied
Start Year 2021
 
Description Tyndall National Institute 
Organisation University College Cork
Department Tyndall National Institute
Country Ireland 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution Technical meetings, discussion and advice
Collaborator Contribution Technical meetings, discussion and advice
Impact Yes, it is multi-disciplinary: Atomistic modelling (Tyndall) + Tribology (University of Glasgow) + Electronics (University of Glasgow)
Start Year 2021
 
Title ShoeTENG - Optimised Triboelectric nanogenerators in shoes and runners 
Description We have developed an optimised approach for constructing TENGs inside shoes and runners (i.e. to generate electricity from daily walking or running). Much of the novelty we have added relates to the structural design and the tribology and mechanics of the device. We have built a working demonstrator model in the lab which is quite effective. 
Type Of Technology Physical Model/Kit 
Year Produced 2023 
Impact This work is not yet published 
 
Title Sliding mode cylindrical triboelectric nanogenerator 
Description We have designed and built a working model cylindrical sliding mode TENG. Normal load is adjustable. The device can be connected with any universal test machine. 
Type Of Technology Physical Model/Kit 
Year Produced 2023 
Impact This work is not yet published. However, it allows us to do 2 things: Test textile samples in sliding mode (using the cylindrical TENG arrangement) and Adapt the device for generation of electricity from water waves. 
 
Description Conference presentation: 16th International Conference on Advances in Experimental Mechanics, Oxford, Sept 6-8 2022 
Form Of Engagement Activity A talk or presentation
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Professional Practitioners
Results and Impact 16th International Conference on Advances in Experimental Mechanics, Oxford, Sept 6-8 2022
Title of talk: Systematic Contact Mechanics Investigation of Micropatterned Triboelectric Nanogenerator.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2022
 
Description Division Seminar 
Form Of Engagement Activity A talk or presentation
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach Local
Primary Audience Professional Practitioners
Results and Impact 1 Hour Seminar to the Systems, Power and Energy Division at the University of Glasgow
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2021
 
Description Interview with World Textile Information Network (WTiN) 
Form Of Engagement Activity A press release, press conference or response to a media enquiry/interview
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Industry/Business
Results and Impact Interview with World Textile Information Network (WTiN)
Purpose: to raise awareness about the project in industry circles
Outcomes: article was published about the grant in a Interview with World Textile Information Network (WTiN) publication
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2021
 
Description Invited Talk, Solar to Alternative Fuel Economy Workshop, Northumbria University - Dec 9th 2022 
Form Of Engagement Activity A talk or presentation
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Professional Practitioners
Results and Impact A 20 min presentation on our TENG work was presented to workshop delegates (in person) at Northumbria University.
Presentation title was: 'Optimising Triboelectric Nanogenerator Output: the Role of Surface Roughness and Contact Area'.
There was a lot of interest and questions after the event as the audience where not so familiar with triboelectric technology.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2022
URL https://www.northumbria.ac.uk/about-us/news-events/events/2022/12/solar-to-alternative-fuel-economy-...
 
Description Invited Talk: 14th International Conference on Physics of Advanced Materials, Dubrovnik Croatia, Sept 8-15, 2022 
Form Of Engagement Activity A talk or presentation
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Professional Practitioners
Results and Impact Invited talk at an international Conference:
14th International Conference on Physics of Advanced Materials, Dubrovnik Croatia, Sept 8-15, 2022.
Title of talk: The Role of Surface Topography in Optimising Triboelectric Nanogenerator Performance.
Generated a lot of interest among delegates.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2022
URL https://icpam.ro/team-member/daniel-mulvihill/