Andrew Anderson launched the OnBeat headphones on crowdfunding site Kickstarter and hopes to have them on sale by early 2014. The headphone band is fitted with a flexible solar cell with a charge capacity of 0.55 watts.
The energy generated is stored in two small lithium batteries. Concealed within both earpads, the batteries charge the device they are plugged into as it is playing.
Mr Anderson hopes to raise £200,000 to get the headphones into production. "We are still working on the design and prototype," he told the BBC. "We need to improve the headphones - people want to know about noise cancellation."
He admitted that his father Frank had come up with the idea. "It's really simple - you would think it had already been done," he said. "You can buy solar chargers for phones but the thing is it's like you're carrying two phones around."
The idea of using renewable sources to charge devices is proving popular among developers.
A number of inventors have looked at harnessing the energy generated by walking. One project seeking crowdfunding via Kickstarter in the US is a shoe insole that can be used to charge batteries.
Source: BBC News