A New Battery Can Be Stitched Into Clothes to Power Wearables

Who Are You Wearing?

A bendable, thread-like battery could power next-generation wearables — and you can sew it into an item of clothing like any other piece of embroidery.

One use for the battery system, which is the brainchild of University of Massachusetts Amherst chemist Trisha Andrew: giving people with diabetes a discreet way to power devices that monitor blood sugar levels.

Paying for the Logo

In research published last month in the journal ACS: Applied Materials & Interfaces, the system stored and transferred an electrical charge just as well when crumpled, bent, and rolled up as it did when laid flat.

That demonstrates that the system can be sewn into clothes and survive the usual wear and tear of everyday life, hopefully granting a greater degree of autonomy and freedom to people who might normally need to be cautious with larger battery packs.

Permanent Press

But like all of the other cool developments in garments that store or generate power, this system hasn’t hit the market. Rather, last month’s research is still at the proof-of-concept stage. We know it works conceptually, but that’s about it.

Perhaps one of the hurdles left to overcome is washing: Futurism reached out to Andrew to learn whether the device can withstand any sort of cleaning. This article will be updated if we learn that the device can be thrown in with a load of whites, or if it will need to be threaded in and out of a shirt each time people need to hit the laundromat.

READ MORE: UMass Amherst Materials Scientists Create Fabric Alternative to Batteries for Wearable Devices [UMass Amherst News & Media Relations]

More on high-tech fashion: You Can Now Buy The World’s First Graphene Jacket, And It’s Everything You Want It To Be

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