If you’ve ever seen yourself through a thermal imaging camera, you’ll know that your body produces lots of heat. This is in fact a waste product of our metabolism. Every square foot of the human body ...
Body heat can be captured and used to heat buildings, reducing conventional energy consumption. Hospitals and commercial spaces like nightclubs are exploring the use of body heat for heating and ...
Forget hunting for a power socket; the heat from your wrist might soon be enough to keep your smartwatch running indefinitely ...
According to a study published in Advanced Materials, University of Washington (UW) researchers have developed a flexible, durable electronic prototype that can harvest energy from body heat and ...
(upper left) Photo of DLP 3D-printed hydrogel lattice before (DH) and after soaking in thermoelectric solution (DHFG), along with microstructured such as a microneedle and a flower-shaped hydrogel ...
Muhammad Muddasar is working as Research Assistant in University of Limerick, Ireland. He received funding from Department of Agriculture, Food and the Marine for this project. If you’ve ever seen ...
Harvesting energy sources such as heat, vibration, light, and electromagnetic waves from everyday environments such as industrial sites and automobiles and converting them into electrical energy is ...