Red wine may hold the key to next-gen wearable technology:
Extracting tannic acid from red wine, coffee or black tea, led a team of scientists from the University of Manchester to develop much more durable and flexible wearable devices. The addition of tannins improved mechanical properties of materials such as cotton to develop wearable sensors for rehabilitation monitoring, drastically increasing the devices lifespan.
The team
have developed wearable devices such as capacitive breath sensors and
artificial hands for extreme conditions by improving the durability of flexible
sensors. Previously, wearable technology has been subject to fail after
repeated bending and folding which can interrupt the conductivity of such
devices due to tiny micro cracks. Improving this could open the door to more
long-lasting integrated technology.
Dr.
Xuqing Liu who led the research team said: "We are using this method to
develop new flexible, breathable, wearable devices. The main research objective
of our group is to develop comfortable wearable devices for flexible
human-machine interface.
"Traditional
conductive material suffers from weak bonding to the fibers which can result in
low conductivity. When red wine, or coffee, or black tea, is sprinkled on
dress, it will be difficult to get rid of these stains. The main reason is that
they all contain tannic acid, which can firmly adsorb the material on the
surface of the fiber. This good adhesion is exactly what we need for durable
wearable, conductive devices."
The new
research published in the journal Small demonstrated that without this layer of
tannic acid, the conductivity is several hundred times, or even thousands of
times, less than traditional conductive material samples as the conductive
coating becomes easily detached from the textile surface through repeated
bending and flexing.
The team
used commercially available tannins but also tried to immerse the fabric
directly in red wine, black tea and black coffee solutions where they saw the
same results. The overall impact of this new method could see a reduction in
price for wearable technology along with improvements in comfort and
robustness.
The
improved conductivity using natural sources can allow technology developers to
use more comfortable fabrics, such as cotton, to replace nylon, which is stiff
and uncomfortable. The technology can also allow for circuits to be printed
directly on to the surface of clothing to make a comfortable, flexible circuit
board.
Due to
the strong adsorption of tannic acid, the surface conductive coating has good
durability, and the developed wearable devices maintain excellent performance
after bending, folding and stretching.
Source:
Nano Magazine
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