E-textile technology: From materials to applications and wireless distance transfer

Research output: Contributions to collected editions/worksArticle in conference proceedingsResearchpeer-review

Standard

E-textile technology: From materials to applications and wireless distance transfer. / Fadhel, Yosra Ben; Bouattour, Ghada; Bouchaala, Dhouha et al.
2023 20th International Multi-Conference on Systems, Signals and Devices, SSD 2023. Piscataway: Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Inc., 2023. p. 744-749 (International Multi-Conference on Systems, Signals and Devices; No. 20).

Research output: Contributions to collected editions/worksArticle in conference proceedingsResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Fadhel, YB, Bouattour, G, Bouchaala, D, Derbel, N & Kanoun, O 2023, E-textile technology: From materials to applications and wireless distance transfer. in 2023 20th International Multi-Conference on Systems, Signals and Devices, SSD 2023. International Multi-Conference on Systems, Signals and Devices, no. 20, Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Inc., Piscataway, pp. 744-749, 20th International Multi-Conference on Systems, Signals and Devices - SSD 2023, Mahdia, Tunisia, 20.02.23. https://doi.org/10.1109/SSD58187.2023.10411250

APA

Fadhel, Y. B., Bouattour, G., Bouchaala, D., Derbel, N., & Kanoun, O. (2023). E-textile technology: From materials to applications and wireless distance transfer. In 2023 20th International Multi-Conference on Systems, Signals and Devices, SSD 2023 (pp. 744-749). (International Multi-Conference on Systems, Signals and Devices; No. 20). Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Inc.. https://doi.org/10.1109/SSD58187.2023.10411250

Vancouver

Fadhel YB, Bouattour G, Bouchaala D, Derbel N, Kanoun O. E-textile technology: From materials to applications and wireless distance transfer. In 2023 20th International Multi-Conference on Systems, Signals and Devices, SSD 2023. Piscataway: Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Inc. 2023. p. 744-749. (International Multi-Conference on Systems, Signals and Devices; 20). doi: 10.1109/SSD58187.2023.10411250

Bibtex

@inbook{266e8791b4f248cba08ccf455336e300,
title = "E-textile technology: From materials to applications and wireless distance transfer",
abstract = "Wearable technology is suitable for specific electronic applications in a variety of industries, including healthcare, entertainment, sports, and military. Although the market for wearable technology is growing, most of the present devices are battery-powered accessories, and their form factors prevent them from taking advantage of the human body's huge surface area for spatiotemporal sensing or energy harvesting from movements. However, consumer devices have been hard to come by due to the inherent difficulties in replicating traditional manufacturing technologies (that have enabled these wearable accessories) on textiles. E-textiles offers an opportunity to expand on current wearables to enable such applications via the larger surface area offered by garments. Additionally, the requirement for textiles to be flexible, and machine washable has been shown to be incompatible with the powering of e-textile devices using battery energy, like in wearable accessories. The pathway to industry-scale commercialization is still unclear, despite the fact that recent research on e-textiles has revealed improvements in materials, novel processing methods, and unique e-textile prototype devices. In addition, active E-textile devices requires a comfortable source of power to remove the batteries' use drawbacks. The distance transfer is one of the biggest challenge of this technology. This article discusses the advancements made in the technology used to create smart textiles with a big focus on the wireless power transfer techniques. It points out difficulties that prevent the industry from adopting the indicated fabrication technologies and devices for mass-market commercialization.",
keywords = "Flexible coils, inductive power transfer, smart textiles, wireless power transfer, Informatics",
author = "Fadhel, {Yosra Ben} and Ghada Bouattour and Dhouha Bouchaala and Nabil Derbel and Olfa Kanoun",
note = "Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2023 IEEE.; 20th International Multi-Conference on Systems, Signals and Devices - SSD 2023, SSD 2023 ; Conference date: 20-02-2023 Through 23-02-2023",
year = "2023",
doi = "10.1109/SSD58187.2023.10411250",
language = "English",
isbn = "979-8-3503-3257-5",
series = "International Multi-Conference on Systems, Signals and Devices",
publisher = "Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Inc.",
number = "20",
pages = "744--749",
booktitle = "2023 20th International Multi-Conference on Systems, Signals and Devices, SSD 2023",
address = "United States",
url = "https://ssd-conf.org/learnmore/SSD%2723",

}

RIS

TY - CHAP

T1 - E-textile technology

T2 - 20th International Multi-Conference on Systems, Signals and Devices - SSD 2023

AU - Fadhel, Yosra Ben

AU - Bouattour, Ghada

AU - Bouchaala, Dhouha

AU - Derbel, Nabil

AU - Kanoun, Olfa

N1 - Conference code: 20

PY - 2023

Y1 - 2023

N2 - Wearable technology is suitable for specific electronic applications in a variety of industries, including healthcare, entertainment, sports, and military. Although the market for wearable technology is growing, most of the present devices are battery-powered accessories, and their form factors prevent them from taking advantage of the human body's huge surface area for spatiotemporal sensing or energy harvesting from movements. However, consumer devices have been hard to come by due to the inherent difficulties in replicating traditional manufacturing technologies (that have enabled these wearable accessories) on textiles. E-textiles offers an opportunity to expand on current wearables to enable such applications via the larger surface area offered by garments. Additionally, the requirement for textiles to be flexible, and machine washable has been shown to be incompatible with the powering of e-textile devices using battery energy, like in wearable accessories. The pathway to industry-scale commercialization is still unclear, despite the fact that recent research on e-textiles has revealed improvements in materials, novel processing methods, and unique e-textile prototype devices. In addition, active E-textile devices requires a comfortable source of power to remove the batteries' use drawbacks. The distance transfer is one of the biggest challenge of this technology. This article discusses the advancements made in the technology used to create smart textiles with a big focus on the wireless power transfer techniques. It points out difficulties that prevent the industry from adopting the indicated fabrication technologies and devices for mass-market commercialization.

AB - Wearable technology is suitable for specific electronic applications in a variety of industries, including healthcare, entertainment, sports, and military. Although the market for wearable technology is growing, most of the present devices are battery-powered accessories, and their form factors prevent them from taking advantage of the human body's huge surface area for spatiotemporal sensing or energy harvesting from movements. However, consumer devices have been hard to come by due to the inherent difficulties in replicating traditional manufacturing technologies (that have enabled these wearable accessories) on textiles. E-textiles offers an opportunity to expand on current wearables to enable such applications via the larger surface area offered by garments. Additionally, the requirement for textiles to be flexible, and machine washable has been shown to be incompatible with the powering of e-textile devices using battery energy, like in wearable accessories. The pathway to industry-scale commercialization is still unclear, despite the fact that recent research on e-textiles has revealed improvements in materials, novel processing methods, and unique e-textile prototype devices. In addition, active E-textile devices requires a comfortable source of power to remove the batteries' use drawbacks. The distance transfer is one of the biggest challenge of this technology. This article discusses the advancements made in the technology used to create smart textiles with a big focus on the wireless power transfer techniques. It points out difficulties that prevent the industry from adopting the indicated fabrication technologies and devices for mass-market commercialization.

KW - Flexible coils

KW - inductive power transfer

KW - smart textiles

KW - wireless power transfer

KW - Informatics

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85185825241&partnerID=8YFLogxK

U2 - 10.1109/SSD58187.2023.10411250

DO - 10.1109/SSD58187.2023.10411250

M3 - Article in conference proceedings

AN - SCOPUS:85185825241

SN - 979-8-3503-3257-5

T3 - International Multi-Conference on Systems, Signals and Devices

SP - 744

EP - 749

BT - 2023 20th International Multi-Conference on Systems, Signals and Devices, SSD 2023

PB - Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Inc.

CY - Piscataway

Y2 - 20 February 2023 through 23 February 2023

ER -