Conductive ‘Energy Textiles’ enable new wearable electronics with better energy storage

January 21, 2010

A new process for making stretchable, porous, and conductive “Energy Textiles” using “ink” made from single-walled carbon nanotubes has been developed by Stanford University scientists, according to the American Chemical Society’s Nano Letters.

These highly conductive textiles can provide new design opportunities for wearable electronics, including energy storage applications using supercapacitors.