Wearable generator

A wearable generator is an article of clothing that contains some form of electrical generation system built in. The concept encompasses a variety of generation systems intended to supply small amounts of power to keep portable electronics in a good state of charge through natural motions of the body.

Summary

There are many great projects related to wearable technology or wearable power generation. One concept, for example, is an article of clothing that has the ability to convert the movements of the wearer into electricity using nano-ion pumps.[1] It is based on nanotechnology and has the ability to generate electricity for the purposes of building muscle mass and improving coordination.[2] Emergency workers like firemen and paramedics could use chest-implanted sensors to create a floor plan of unfamiliar buildings; making a rookie perform his job as efficiently as a veteran.[3] With cameras becoming cheaper and smaller, wearable generators may also serve as a quick method to recharge the batteries on those devices. The environmental burden of disposing used batteries has contributed to e-waste; something that wearable generators may drastically reduce.[4] Enough energy can theoretically be harnessed from a person's body heat to power a smartphone or tablet.[5]

gollark: I think VSCode's language server thing would let you run weird parsing logic over the acrostic.
gollark: I mean, are engineers just supposed to engineer from home?
gollark: Physical buildings are sometimes useful, as some stuff is irritating/worse/impractical online.
gollark: They said "thanks for your input", asked for a new dress code, and ignored it.
gollark: > can males wear a skirt<@356107472269869058> My friend (not baidicolt) asked them to make the dress code more gender neutral, but they didn't really.

References

  1. "Spark Suit information". Serious Wheels. Retrieved 2011-01-10.
  2. "Spark Suit information (second reference)". Diseno-Art. Retrieved 2011-01-10.
  3. "MIT Hacks Kinect Laser For A Wearable Map Generator For Firefighters". Tech Crunch. Retrieved 2013-05-31.
  4. "Wearable generators to power battery life in your equipment". Gizmo Watch. Retrieved 2013-05-31.
  5. "Wearable Fabric Could Power Your iPhone". Design News. Retrieved 2013-05-31.
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