Behold “twistron,” a new kind of yarn that converts movement into an impressive amount of electrical current. According to research published today in Science (abstract), twistron is made by spinning carbon nanotubes—which are very good at conducting electricity—into a yarn and then twisting that up into a coil. Dipping twistron in an electrolyte imbues it with its electrical properties, so that it generates a small jolt when stretched, as in the GIF above.
There are a couple of things twistron could be used for. The researchers envision a device that harvests energy from wave action, for example, or it could be woven into clothing and used as a motion sensor. And lest you think these scientists weren’t willing to demonstrate the practicability of their invention, there’s this little tidbit from the news release:
In a proof-of-concept demonstration, co-lead author Dr. Shi Hyeong Kim, a postdoctoral researcher at the NanoTech Institute, waded into the frigid surf off the east coast of South Korea to deploy a coiled twistron in the sea. He attached a 10 centimeter-long yarn, weighing only 1 milligram (about the weight of a mosquito), between a balloon and a sinker that rested on the seabed.
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