: Modern TEGs can power small electronics like smartwatches (e.g., MATRIX PowerWatch) and fitness trackers without ever needing a battery [6, 18].
While this heat is essential for life, it is also a form of "waste" energy that scientists are now learning to harvest. The Biology: How We Generate Heat Body Heat
: In Glasgow, the nightclub SWG3 uses "BODYHEAT" technology to capture the warmth from dancing partiers and store it in underground boreholes to heat the building later [10]. Future Outlook : Modern TEGs can power small electronics like
: To keep enzymes functioning properly, the body must stay within a narrow temperature range [14]. When you get cold, your body uses brown fat or shivering to generate extra warmth [4]. When you overheat, the hypothalamus triggers sweating and vasodilation (rushing blood to the skin) to release excess heat [9]. The Technology: Harvesting "People Power" Future Outlook : To keep enzymes functioning properly,
Your body is a walking furnace. Every square foot of human skin releases heat equivalent to about [1].
The concept of "body heat" spans from the biological marvel of human metabolism to a cutting-edge frontier in renewable energy. Humans maintain a constant internal temperature of approximately , a feat managed by the brain's hypothalamus acting as a biological thermostat [13].
: New research has produced 3D-printable, stretchable fabrics that can power medical sensors or LEDs just by touching the skin [8, 11].