The Apple Watch and Google Glass are some of the
most widely known wearable devices, but the ways users can interact with these
"smart" gadgets
are limited. For instance, it would be pretty difficult to type a message out
on the face of a watch. And forget even trying with a pair of smart glasses.
But now, researchers have developed wearable keyboards made of electronics
knitted together like fabric that could lead to a new kind of human-machine
interface.
Right now, the key way that people interact with
computers is by using the keyboard, researchers say. However, creating wearable
keyboards for wearable
electronics is a challenging task — such keyboards have to be large to fit enough
keys to be useful, and must be flexible and stretchable to follow the movements
of the human body.
In the past three years or so, researchers have
tried to make electronics more wearable by making
them like clothing — for instance, by knitting wires together into fabrics.
These electronic textiles can get stretched up to the limit where the fibers
are straightened. Such technology "provides a simple way to interact with
machines," said Esma Ismailova,a polymer science engineer at the National
School of Mines in Gardanne, France, andco-author of a new study describing the
new keyboards. [Best
Smartwatches 2015 – Buying Guide]
The researchers started with polyester fabric. They
stenciled the outline for an electronic circuit onto the fabric using an
electrically insulating silicon rubber called PDMS. Then, they brush-painted an
electrically conductive plastic called PEDOT:PSS onto the outline to fill it
out. Finally, they coated this electronic
circuit with more PDMS.
The scientists used electrodes to connect this
circuit to a computer. Square and rectangular patches of the circuit served as
the keys of a keyboard. Pressing down onthese patches generated easily
detectable electrical signals.
The prototype keyboard can be worn on a sleeve and
has 11 keys, representing the numbers 0 to 9 as well as an asterisk. The
researchers noted that this fabric could be stretched by up to 30 percent and
that after 1,000 cycles of stretching and relaxation, the fabric stayed about
90 percent as electrically conducting as it did at the start.
"A wearable keyboard would provide a more
intuitive interface for tactile input than the touch-sensitive
face of a smartwatch or the hand gestures that control devices such as the
Google Glass," Ismailova told Live Science.
The researchers suggested that textile keyboards
could be woven not only into clothing, but also into furniture, wallpaper and
other surfaces. Such technology "promises to enrich our daily lives with
smart accessories and to change the way we interact with computers,"
Ismailova said.
The researchers belong to a French consortium
working on biomedical applications of textiles, which also includes companies
interested in commercializing aspects of this work.
"One could envision, for example, using such a
keyboard to control their smartphone, activity-tracking device or, down the
road, an implantable medical device," Ismailova said. "It is a rather
straightforward technology, so I would expect some applications in less than
five years. Applications in biomedical — for example, textile electrodes for
monitoring the heart — might take a bit longer due to regulations."
No comments:
Post a Comment