Self-powered green energy–harvesting and sensing interfaces based on hygroscopic gel and water-locking effects

  • Shuai Guo
  • , Shubham Patel
  • , Junhui Wang
  • , Zhen Yu
  • , Hao Qu
  • , Songlin Zhang
  • , Kexin Yu
  • , Siqi Liu
  • , J. Justin Koh
  • , Xue Qi Koh
  • , Zi En Ooi
  • , Debbie Hwee Leng Seng
  • , Wanxin Sun
  • , Lin Yang
  • , Yaoxin Zhang
  • , John Wang
  • , Sai Kishore Ravi
  • , Cunjiang Yu
  • , Swee Ching Tan

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

The rapid proliferation of flexible electronics necessitates the development of self-powered energy harvesting systems with continuous power output and sensing signal monitoring. In this study, inspired by transient voltage output (0.2 volts, <1 hour) through dipping water droplets on metal oxide substrates, a self-sustained energy harvesting and sensing interface (SEHSI, 0.32 volts, >4 days) is proposed by replacing movable water droplets with “confined” moisture, harvested and locked by a hygroscopic polymeric gel with high sorption capacity and rapid sorption-desorption kinetics. Further analysis reveals the capacitive behavior of SEHSI, leading to excellent tactile sensing capabilities with high sensitivity and rapid responsiveness, and humidity and temperature response with robust cyclic stability for over 10,000 cycles. Such all-in-one powering and sensing platforms demonstrate promising application potential in self-powered human-machine interactions, including breath status monitoring, contactless motion detection, and braille detection. Our design establishes a promising approach to developing self-powered energy harvesting and sensing systems for human-machine interfaces.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Article numbereadw5991
JournalScience Advances
Volume11
Issue number27
DOIs
StatePublished - Jul 4 2025

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • General

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Self-powered green energy–harvesting and sensing interfaces based on hygroscopic gel and water-locking effects'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this