Fabric based printed-distributed battery for wearable e-textiles: a review

Sci Technol Adv Mater. 2021 Sep 17;22(1):772-793. doi: 10.1080/14686996.2021.1962203. eCollection 2021.

Abstract

Wearable power supply devices and systems are important necessities for the emerging textile electronic applications. Current energy supply devices usually need more space than the device they power, and are often based on rigid and bulky materials, making them difficult to wear. Fabric-based batteries without any rigid electrical components are therefore ideal candidates to solve the problem of powering these devices. Printing technologies have greater potential in manufacturing lightweight and low-cost batteries with high areal capacity and generating high voltages which are crucial for electronic textile (e-textile) applications. In this review, we present various printing techniques, and battery chemistries applied for smart fabrics, and give a comparison between them in terms of their potential to power the next generation of electronic textiles. Series combinations of many of these printed and distributed battery cells, using electrically conducting threads, have demonstrated their ability to power different electronic devices with a specific voltage and current requirements. Therefore, the present review summarizes the chemistries and material components of several flexible and textile-based batteries, and provides an outlook for the future development of fabric-based printed batteries for wearable and electronic textile applications with enhanced level of DC voltage and current for long periods of time.

Keywords: 206 Energy conversion / transport / storage / recovery; 207 Fuel cells / Batteries / Super capacitors; 50 Energy Materials; 700 Others: Powering Electronic Textiles and Wearables; E-textile; areal capacity; electrical thread; energy supply; printed battery; wearable technology.

Publication types

  • Review

Grants and funding

This study has received funding from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under grant agreement No. 854194.