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WHEN WALKED ON, THESE WOODEN FLOORS HARVEST ENOUGH ENERGY TO TURN ON A LIGHTBULB

BY REPORTER 21
PUBLISHED 20/09/2021 AT GMT+3

Researchers from Switzerland are tapping into an unexpected energy source right under our feet: wooden floorings. Their nanogenerator, presented September 1 in the journal Matter, enables

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Researchers from Switzerland are tapping into an unexpected energy source right under our feet: wooden floorings. Their nanogenerator, presented September 1 in the journal Matter, enables

Researchers from Switzerland are tapping into an unexpected energy source right under our feet: wooden floorings. Their nanogenerator, presented September 1 in the journal Matter, enables wood to generate energy from our footfalls. They also improved the wood used in the their nanogenerator with a combination of a silicone coating and embedded nanocrystals, resulting in a device that was 80 times more efficient -- enough to power LED lightbulbs and small electronics.

The team began by transforming wood into a nanogenerator by sandwiching two pieces of functionalized wood between electrodes. Like a shirt-clinging sock fresh out of the dryer, the wood pieces become electrically charged through periodic contacts and separations when stepped on, a phenomenon called the triboelectric effect. The electrons can transfer from one object to another, generating electricity. However, there's one problem with making a nanogenerator out of wood.

"Wood is basically triboneutral," says senior author Guido Panzarasa, group leader in the professorship of Wood Materials Science located at Eidgenössische Technische Hochschule (ETH) Zürich and Swiss Federal Laboratories for Materials Science and Technology (Empa) Dübendorf. "It means that wood has no real tendency to acquire or to lose electrons." This limits the material's ability to generate electricity, "so the challenge is making wood that is able to attract and lose electrons," Panzarasa explains.

To boost wood's triboelectric properties, the scientists coated one piece of the wood with polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS), a silicone that gains electrons upon contact, while functionalizing the other piece of wood with in-situ-grown nanocrystals called zeolitic imidazolate framework-8 (ZIF-8). ZIF-8, a hybrid network of metal ions and organic molecules, has a higher tendency to lose electrons. They also tested different types of wood to determine whether certain species or the direction in which wood is cut could influence its triboelectric properties by serving as a better scaffold for the coating.

A PHOTO ON PHU SUB LEK VIEWPOINT AT SUNSET LOPBURI THAILAND

BY REPORTER 12
PUBLISHED 09/05/2023 AT GMT+3

Where better than a private island where pristine beaches and a string of spa treatments abound?

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Where better than a private island where pristine beaches and a string of spa treatments abound?

Angsana Spa Cayo Santa Maria in Cuba offers all of the above for a perfect getaway from the holiday hubbub where you can truly shut down and recuperate. Owned by Banyan Tree Hotels and Resorts, you can be sure there is no shortage of great spa facilities and Asian-inspired spa treatments.

The best part is, this is an adults-only resort, so you can truly rest your mind without worrying about any distractions.

Following his win (the jury ruled in favor of Depp’s claim of defamation across three counts), Depp has seemingly edged his way back into Hollywood's favor. His film Jeanne du Barry, in which he stars as Louis XV, has been selected as the opening film at the 76th annual Cannes Film Festival. But what about Heard?

SPORTSWEAR BRANDS GO ALL OUT TO TARGET WOMEN CONSUMERS GLOBALLY

BY REPOTER 11
PUBLISHED 09/05/2023 AT GMT+3

There has been tremendous growth in the women’s sportswear market and global sportswear brands have been competing to lure women consumers.

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There has been tremendous growth in the women’s sportswear market and global sportswear brands have been competing to lure women consumers.

A decade ago, the sportswear market was driven by the concept of ‘cool’ brands that had products that could be identified with the notion and reaped profits. Market leaders like NIKE, Adidas, Under Armour, and PUMA, each had their own set of loyalists, from celebrities, and sports persons to the sports-crazy common man. But of late, even as the sportswear segment continues to grow, it has a new and more demanding driver – ‘women’. According to findings by Allied Market Research, the sportswear category will grow at a CAGR of 4.3 percent to reach a total market revenue worth US $ 184.6 billion by the year 2020. And though the men’s sportswear segment today constitutes around 52 percent of the revenue and is the highest revenue-generating segment in the sports apparel market, every brand has realized the potential of the women’s segment that is expected to grow at a relatively higher CAGR of 5.7 percent during the forecast period, as the involvement of women in sporting and fitness activities increases across the globe.

Every sportswear brand has in the last year added lines targeted specifically at the woman consumer. The momentum has now become so strong that even high-street retailers including Next have gone ahead to introduce sportswear apparel sections that cater exclusively to women. Nike and JD Sports have opened up stores that are all-woman because of the trending size of the women's sportswear market. Significantly, the sports industry is encouraging collaborations between sports brands and the fashion industry in order to produce new styles to cover the needs of the young and women segment which is significantly growing over the past years.



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