Skip to main content

Top menu (en)

  • All Foundations
  • Funding guide
Knut and Alice Wallenberg Foundation logo
  • Svenska
  • Burger menu

Main menu (en)

  • Videos & Presentations
  • Grants
  • Funding Guide
    • Grant Policy
    • Calls
    • Requisitions
    • Reporting
  • The Foundation
    • Board of Directors
    • The Foundation 2025
    • History
  • Press

Mobile menu (en)

ico_btn_plus_blue
Knut & Alice Wallenbers Stiftelse
Knut and Alice Wallenberg Foundation logo
  • Search
  • Videos & Presentations
  • Grants
  • Funding Guide ico_btn_plus_blue
    • Grant Policy
    • Calls
    • Requisitions
    • Reporting
    • Svenska
  • The Foundation ico_btn_plus_blue
    • Board of Directors
    • The Foundation 2025
    • History
    • Svenska
  • Press
  • Svenska
In the future, sensors embedded in clothes might be able to monitor our health or sense deadly gases in a conflict zone. Wallenberg Academy Fellow Christian Müller, Chalmers University of Technology, will develop materials that can power these sensors by transforming body heat into electricity.
Produced by Mediabruket 2016

More videos

Kvinna med glasögon undersöker rötter med pincett, illustration av träd till sidan.
Natural science
Research for the forests of the future – WIFORCE
Tybrandt CLEAN_0.jpg
Technology & physics
Develops soft electronics for the treatment of Parkinson's and epilepsy
Anne L'Huillier
Technology & physics
Nobel Prize-awarded research on ultra-fast attosecond pulses
Knut and Alice Wallenberg Foundation logo

Knut and Alice Wallenberg Foundation has since its establishment in 1917 awarded over almost SEK 42 billion in grants. In 2025 the yearly grants to excellent basic research and education in Sweden was in total over SEK 2.5 billion.

Knut and Alice Wallenberg Foundation
P.O. Box 16066
SE-103 22 Stockholm

[email protected]

Sidfotsmeny (en)

  • Videos & Presentations
  • Grants
  • Funding Guide
  • The Foundation
  • Press
  • All Foundations
  • YouTube
  • X
  • Bluesky
  • LinkedIn
  • Instagram