New textile weathers temperature shift

Why is it in news?

Reversible fabrics of the future may help keep wearers comfortable in any weather.

Details

  • Materials scientists and engineers at Stanford University have developed a multilayered textile that traps body heat on one side and passively radiates heat away from the body when flipped inside out.
  • The material kept artificial skin within a comfortable range of 32° to 36° Celsius as the ambient temperature fluctuated by up to 9 degrees.
  • Under a microscope, the textile looks like a gnarly sandwich. Layers of nanoporous polyethylene, or nanoPE, hug two layers: a rough, porous carbon and a smoother, tighter copper. When the carbon faces away from the body and a thin nanoPE layer is near the skin, the textile is in cooling mode. Body heat can easily escape through the carbon structure. In experiments, the textile lowered the temperature of artificial skin by about 3 degrees.
  • To warm the body, the fabric is reversed so that the copper layer — which doesn’t let body heat easily escape — faces out, and a thick nanoPE layer is near the skin. In warming mode, the artificial skin heated up by about 4 degrees.
  • This sandwich design adds heating and refined cooling capabilities to nanoPE, a cooling fabric that the Stanford team developed in 2016. The new plastic-based material is not ready to wear; the team is developing a fiber-based version “that has a much similar touch and feeling to traditional textiles.

Conclusion

The development of this fabric will greatly help those whose jobs have a major outdoor component, like security guards, policemen, etc.

It would also be useful for armed forces personnel who serve in extreme temperatures.

Source

Sciencenews.org

Posted by Jawwad Kazi on 3rd Feb 2018