When High Tech Becomes Fashion

Transcription

When High Tech Becomes Fashion
Press Release
For The Solar Handbag
By Forster Rohner,
Alexandra Institute
and Diffus Design.
Copenhagen June 2011
When High Tech Becomes Fashion
Luxury handbag becomes a portable power station when miniaturized solar cells and
embroideries are combined
With the boom of environmental consciousness, bags with integrated solar cells to charge your mobile phone or
laptop have become commonplace. The usual approach of placing flexible thin film solar modules onto
messenger type bags, however, has primarily led to products in a outdoor/leisure category. Diffus Design has
teamed up with e.g. Swiss embroidery specialist Forster Rohner and Alexandra institute (DK) to challenge this
approach.
A handbag that charges your mobile, helps you find your keys and looks amazing!
In the daytime hours one hundred small solar power stations distributed on The Solar Handbag generate enough
electricity to charge a mobile device and a powerful lithium ion battery hidden in a small compartment. At night
or in dark surroundings, opening the bag activates optical fibres attached to the inside of the bag that give a
diffuse glow and assist in the search for keys, purse or other objects of vital importance.
An aesthetic approach to function
The desire to create a solar energy harvesting surface that offers maximum design freedom while still being
highly efficient is the driving force behind The Solar Handbag. Working around existing technologies is not an
option: Most textile-based products have limited surface areas available and therefore thin film solar cells have
limitations regarding efficiency and aesthetics. The technology behind The Solar Handbag is based on
miniaturizing the currently most efficient photovoltaic material, monocrystalline silicon, into oversized sequins
and processing them through traditional textile techniques.
The shape of the bag resembles the story between the relationship between the sun and moon – between light
source and enlightened. Therefore the shape mimics an eclipse where the moon – the enlightened – interfere or
interact with the sun – the light source. The surface is embroidered with an integrated combination of normal
embroidery and conductive embroidery that is able to convey the energy harvested for the solar sequins to the
rechargeable battery.
Promise of a powerful future
The Solar Handbag illustrates the first development step towards highly efficient, textile based solar cell
surfaces. The first generation of solar elements shows an efficiency of 9% when converting solar energy into
electrical energy. Overall, the solar elements distributed on The Solar Handbag are able to generate 2 Watts,
more than enough energy to charge a mobile device, even at low daily exposure to sunlight. The next generation
of solar elements are already promising - the new developments will double the efficiency.
For further Information please contact: Diffus Design, [email protected] , +45 6126 7062 / +45 60831920
Partner
Development of the solar elements was initiated by Swiss embroidery company Forster Rohner AG and conducted
in a joint research project between the Hochschule für Technik Rapperswil (CH) and the NTB Buchs (CH). The
Solar Handbag was created by Diffus Design (DK), in collaboration with the Swiss partners and The Alexandra
Institute (DK) and Center for Software Innovation (DK).
Diffus Design:
The Danish design studio DIFFUS is working with interactive tangible technologies and is always in an ongoing
investigation to exploit new and traditional materials and ways to handle those. Within our journey with Forster
Rohner and the Alexandra Institute the focus has been on textiles, computer generated systems and sensor
technology in the field of solar energy, soft circuits and low energy light. This exploration have been driven by
curiosity and a need for investigation in the different fields, so we thereby can create new, different and unique
design solutions such as as the Climate Dress
(www.diffus.dk/pollutiondress/movie/climate-dress-text.mov) and the Solar Handbag..
Hanne-Louise Johannesen and Michel Guglielmi, Owners
T: +45 6126 7062 / +45 60831920
E: [email protected]
W: www.diffus.dk
Blog: www.diffus.dk/wordpress
Twitter: diffusdesign
Photography: Lisbeth Holten / www.lisbethholten.dk

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