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Power your phone with your body heat

By | February 27, 2012, 5:04 AM PST

Someday soon, we may have eminently portable phone battery rechargers on us at all times — and they may be our pants pockets.

Power Felt is a “thermoelectric” device, which means that it can take the difference in temperature between, say, your body temperature and the room temperature, and use that to create a charge. Theoretically, it could be put into our clothing — pants, jackets, etc. to charge our phones or iPods.

Developed by Wake Forest University researchers at the Center for Nanotechnology and Molecular Materials, Power Felt is “comprised of tiny carbon nanotubes locked up in flexible plastic fibers and made to feel like fabric,” according to the university press release. Carbon nanotubes are tiny cylinder-shaped molecules of linked carbon atoms.

Their research appears in the current issue of Nano Letters.

Researcher and Wake Forest graduate student Corey Hewitt says:

“We waste a lot of energy in the form of heat. For example, recapturing a car’s energy waste could help improve fuel mileage and power the radio, air conditioning or navigation system. Generally thermoelectrics are an underdeveloped technology for harvesting energy, yet there is so much opportunity.”

Power Felt could be used many ways. It could:

  • line car seats to boost car battery power
  • insulate pipes or collect heat under roof tiles to help reduce gas or electricity bills
  • be wrapped around IV or wound sites to help in medical monitoring
  • line sports clothing to monitor athletic performance

“Imagine it in an emergency kit, wrapped around a flashlight, powering a weather radio, charging a prepaid cell phone,” adds David Carroll, director of the Center for Nanotechnology and Molecular Materials. “Power Felt could provide relief during power outages or accidents.”

Thermoelectrics are currently too expensive to be used widely in consumer products, because they use bismuth telluride, a substance that is much more efficient, but that can cost as much as $1,000 a kilogram. Power Felt could someday be as cheap as $1 to add to a cell phone cover.

Power Felt needs more work before it can be brought to market, but Hewitt says,

I imagine being able to make a jacket with a completely thermoelectric inside liner that gathers warmth from body heat, while the exterior remains cold from the outside temperature. If the Power Felt is efficient enough, you could potentially power an iPod, which would be great for distance runners. It’s definitely within reach.”

Related on SmartPlanet:

Photo: Ken Bennett/Wake Forest University

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Laura Shin

About Laura Shin

Laura Shin is a contributing editor for SmartPlanet.

Laura Shin

Laura Shin

Contributing Editor

Laura Shin has been published in The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal and The Los Angeles Times, and is currently a contributor at Forbes. Previously, she worked at Newsweek, the New York Times, Wall Street Journal and LearnVest. She holds degrees from Stanford University and Columbia University's Graduate School of Journalism.

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Laura Shin

Laura Shin

In the unlikely event that Laura has a professional or financial relationship with a company she writes about, it will be prominently disclosed.

She writes for SmartPlanet and is not an employee of CBS.

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Great Idea
This would definitely be a great idea and I hope it goes into production in the near future. Especially with all the smartphones that we have with no battery life to speak of, it would be awesome to just put your phone in your pocket and charge it.
Posted by sepconet
27th Feb 2012
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Now...if this same tech would work for Pacemakers...
A recent development seems to have effectively eliminated the need for "hard-wiring" the Pacemaker, which will reduce and even eliminate the root of a number of serious and potentially life-threatening infections. however if your own body could power it, it could be placed, and with RFID tech be set and regulated, without ever opening the chest cavity again. that could add decades to the Life Expectancy of Chronic Congestive Heart Failure Patients.
Posted by DrRexDexter
28th Feb 2012
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