Sunday, December 14, 2025
ADVT 
Interesting

Engineers Give New Meaning To The Phrase 'Cool Clothes'

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 02 Sep, 2016 01:27 PM
WASHINGTON — Engineers have created clothing for a warming world — a fabric that allows your body heat to escape far better than other materials do.
 
It hasn't been worn or tested by humans, so outside experts caution this is far from a sure thing, but a team at Stanford University engineered a fabric using nano technology that not only allows moisture to leave the body better, but helps infrared radiation escape better.
 
As a result, they say in Thursday's journal Science , the body should feel around 4.8 degrees (2.7 degrees Celsius) cooler than cotton and 3.8 degrees (2.1 degrees Celsius) chillier than commercially available synthetics.
 
This is designed for a warmer world — not just because climate change is making temperatures hotter, but because it takes a lot of energy to heat and cool people's offices and homes, said study lead author Yi Cui, a professor of materials and engineering.
 
"What we need is heating or cooling of individual human beings. How do you do personal thermal management?" Cui said.
 
Existing fabrics already do a good job of taking moisture away from the body, but the issue is more "how do you control the infrared radiation coming out of the human body," he said. Material does a good job of trapping that heat energy to warm you, but letting it go is another matter. That's where clear clingy plastic kitchen wrap comes in.
 
Plastic wrap — polyethylene — does a good job of allowing infrared radiation to escape the body. The trouble is it also allows visible light to escape, Cui said. That means, you can see through it, which isn't exactly what most people want from clothing.
 
So the engineering team worked at changing the pore size of the material and added other chemicals, allowing the heat and moisture out, but not visible light. And it is cheaper than cotton, Cui said.
 
But that material felt too flat, so the next step was to weave it, to feel like regular fabric, Cui said.
 
"You touch, it feels very soft," Cui said.
 
They've used devices to mimic human skin and monitor skin temperatures, but strict scientific testing rules have prevented them from testing clothing on actual humans, Cui said. That's the next step and outside scientists said there are all sorts of potential pitfalls. And after that, another three years would pass before mass production could proceed so people could buy and wear it, he said.
 
"There are many factors relating to the compatibility and feel of the fabric in contact with the skin — washability, durability, compatibility with coloring materials and how they impact radiative properties that remain completely unexplored," Yogendra Joshi, a professor of mechanical engineering at the Georgia Institute of Technology who wasn't part of the study, said in an email. "Replacing fabrics such as cotton that have been around for over 8,000 years is a tall order."

MORE Interesting ARTICLES

Smriti Irani Trends On Internet After Being Spotted Waiting In Queue At Starbucks Without Security

Smriti Irani Trends On Internet After Being Spotted Waiting In Queue At Starbucks Without Security
Smriti Irani walked in without any security, politely placed her order, went to take it herself and then left without any creating any fuss around.

Smriti Irani Trends On Internet After Being Spotted Waiting In Queue At Starbucks Without Security

Bikini-Clad New Mom Pens Perfect Response to Body Shamer

Bikini-Clad New Mom Pens Perfect Response to Body Shamer
This is what a mother said when she was told it’s not ‘appropriate’ for her to wear a bikini

Bikini-Clad New Mom Pens Perfect Response to Body Shamer

Sasha Obama Takes Summer Job At Seafood Joint

Sasha Obama Takes Summer Job At Seafood Joint
It's applause-worthy that 15-year-old Sasha Obama has given up the comfort of the White House and has taken up a job at a seafood joint.

Sasha Obama Takes Summer Job At Seafood Joint

X-Ray Uncovers Hidden Portrait Beneath Famed Degas Painting

X-Ray Uncovers Hidden Portrait Beneath Famed Degas Painting
SYDNEY, Australia — A powerful X-ray technique has unveiled a hidden portrait beneath a famed painting by French impressionist artist Edgar Degas, helping solve a mystery that has stumped the art world for decades.

X-Ray Uncovers Hidden Portrait Beneath Famed Degas Painting

B.C. Court Bans American Man And His Medical Diagnostic Company From Providing Ultrasounds

B.C. Court Bans American Man And His Medical Diagnostic Company From Providing Ultrasounds
VANCOUVER — A British Columbia court has banned an American man and his medical diagnostic company from providing ultrasounds in the province.

B.C. Court Bans American Man And His Medical Diagnostic Company From Providing Ultrasounds

Indian American Entrepreneur’s Company Approved For Moon Landing

Indian American Entrepreneur’s Company Approved For Moon Landing
Naveen Jain, the founder of Moon Express, called the US government OK on Wednesday for the MX1-E moon lander "another giant leap for humanity".

Indian American Entrepreneur’s Company Approved For Moon Landing