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Smart Textiles

All articles tagged with #smart textiles

Hair-thin fiber chips turn garments into microcomputers
innovation5 hours ago

Hair-thin fiber chips turn garments into microcomputers

Researchers at Fudan University have created fully flexible fiber chips that embed complete electronic circuits inside hair-thin strands, forming fiber integrated circuits (FICs) with high transistor density capable of processing digital, analog, and neural-style computing; these fibers survive thousands of bending cycles, washing, and heat, enabling self-contained computing in smart textiles and wearables, with early scalable manufacturing and publication in Nature.

Revolutionary Cotton-Based Fiber Paves the Way for Smart Textiles
science-and-technology2 years ago

Revolutionary Cotton-Based Fiber Paves the Way for Smart Textiles

Researchers at Washington State University have developed a single strand of fiber that combines the flexibility of cotton with the electric conductivity of a polymer called polyaniline. The material has potential for use in wearable e-textiles and can be integrated into apparel as sensor patches with flexible circuits. Applications include uniforms for firefighters, soldiers, and workers handling chemicals to detect hazardous exposures, as well as health monitoring or exercise shirts. The researchers overcame the challenge of mixing the conductive polymer with cotton cellulose by dissolving cotton cellulose from recycled t-shirts and the conductive polymer into separate solutions, which were then merged together to create the fiber.

Revolutionary Cotton-Based Fiber Paves the Way for Smart Textiles
technology2 years ago

Revolutionary Cotton-Based Fiber Paves the Way for Smart Textiles

Researchers at Washington State University have developed a cotton-based fiber that combines the flexibility of cotton with the electric conductivity of a polymer called polyaniline. The material shows potential for use in wearable e-textiles, such as sensor patches integrated into apparel for detecting hazardous exposures or monitoring health. The researchers overcame the challenge of mixing the conductive polymer with cotton cellulose by dissolving cotton cellulose from recycled t-shirts and the conductive polymer into separate solutions, which were then merged together to create a single fiber. The resulting material exhibited good interfacial bonding and could be used in various applications, including smart clothing.