Shirts made of piezoelectric fabrics could make charging your portable electronics easier than ever.
First there were tie-dyes, then there were hypercolors. Could
piezoelectric fabrics that charge your mobile phone while you wear them
be the next big T-shirt fad? That's what the French telecom company,
Orange, is counting on, reports the Telegraph.
The shirts utilize ambient sound as a catalyst to produce electric
voltage, and are being rolled out just in time for the Glastonbury Music
Festival in Britain. Developers hope that the shirts will offer a
convenient, eco-friendly way for festival goers to charge their phones
while they're rocking out away from the grid.
The material used in the shirts is made from a product called
piezoelectric film, which is capable of transforming sound waves into an
electric charge via the compression of interlaced quartz crystals.
Once that electric charge is generated, it is stored in a reservoir
battery which can, in turn, be used to charge your mobile device.
Prototypes for the technology are being called "Sound Charge." They
don't quite have the most fashionable of looks just yet, but it's their
forward-thinking, eco-friendly design that ultimately makes them
wearable. Besides, unlike most fashion trends, these shirts actually
serve a purpose.
After a weekend of mosh pits and camping out, the shirts will
undoubtedly need to be washed. The good news is that Sound Charge's
developers already thought of that, too. All of the shirt's key
electronic parts can be easily removed so that the shirt can be washed
just like any other T-shirt.
The Glastonbury Festival was the ideal venue for testing the
prototypes because of all the ambient noise, but people who spend a lot
of time away from noisy concert scenes may want to wait for the
technology to develop before donning their own Sound Charge T's.
According to the technology website The Register,
even over the course of a loud weekend at Glastonbury, the shirts would
only store about six watt hours. That might "recharge a smartphone
once, if you're lucky." Even so, that may be all the charge you'll need
over the course of a weekend.
The shirts' charging ability may eventually be boosted by being
combined with other wearable piezoelectric items. Last year Orange
produced Wellington boots with chargers in the heel that generated
electricity with each step. Who knows, before long your entire wardrobe
may become a portable, wearable power plant.
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