High-Tech Tattoo Could Power Smartphone โ€” Eventually

UC San Diego researchers have created the world's most -- and perhaps only -- useful temporary tattoo

Soon your workouts may do more than power up your health. They could also power up small devices like your smartphone.

A team at the UC San Diego has developed an exciting way to harness energy from sweat using a temporary tattoo, according to the American Chemical Society (ACS).

The process is built on lactate โ€“ a byproduct of exercise. The UC San Diego group, led by Professor Joseph Wang, placed a small, flexible lactate sensor on a temporary tattoo โ€“ which look more business logo than the brightly colored unicorn or Mutant Ninja Turtles shapes of your childhood.

When they peeled the tattoos onto volunteersโ€™ arms, the sensors stripped electrons from the lactate using a special enzyme, and those electrons generated a weak electrical current.

โ€œSo we can make this idea of harvesting energy directly from the body in a non-invasive manner,โ€ said Wang in an ACS YouTube video on the topic. โ€œSo this is the first example of the biofuel cell that harvests energy from body fluid like sweat.โ€

The researchers then built a sweat-powered biobattery to harness small amounts of electricity.

Placing 15 tattoo-bearing volunteers on a stationary bike, the team tracked how much power each person generated over 30 minutes.

They discovered people who exercised fewer than once a week produced more power than those who worked out between one to three times a week. According to the ACS, the researchers explained this is because less-fit people get tired faster and produce more lactate.

The Truman National Security Project announced a San Diego chapter today. The organization says its mission is to unite next-generation veteran, political, and policy leaders. NBC 7’s Bridget Naso reports.

The maximum amount of energy created by the top volunteer was 70 microwatts per square centimeter of skin โ€“ a far cry from the amount of energy needed to power a phone. The average smartphone requires 35 milliwatts each hour, according to Mashable.

โ€œSo besides working to get higher power, we also need to leverage electronics to store the generated current and make it sufficient for these requirements,โ€ team member Wenzhao Jia, Ph.D. told the ACS.

Once they figure out how to store energy more efficiently, maybe then theyโ€™ll work on tattoo design โ€“ at least a flower or star or something.

Contact Us