China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Scientists create unique fabric for cool clothes

- By LIA ZHU in San Francisco liazhu@chinadaily­usa.com

Chinese researcher­s at Stanford University have developed a plastic-based textile that can cool the human body and may someday reduce demand for air conditioni­ng.

The material cools by not only taking away sweat like ordinary fabrics do but also by allowing the heat that the body emits as infrared radiation to pass through, which makes the wearers feel cooler than they would when wearing cotton clothes, according to the researcher­s’ study, recently published in the journal Science.

Bycooling thepersonr­ather than an entire building, a substantia­l impact could be made on global energy use, according to Yi Cui, an associate professor of materials science and engineerin­g at Stanford and the lead author of the study.

Thehumanbo­dyemitsmid­infrared radiation, an invisible and benign wavelength of light. That contribute­s tomore than 50 percent of the total body-heat loss in a typical indoor setting like an office.

However, traditiona­l textiles are not designed for infrared radiation control.

To enhance radiative dissipatio­n in hot weather, the researcher­s used nanoporous polyethyle­ne, or nanoPE, a variant of polyethyle­ne widely used in batterymak­ing, which allows infrared radiation to pass through it while opaque to visible light.

There are also other challenges that the researcher­s need to address beyond ensuring the cooling effect, such as wicking, mechanical strength and air permeabili­ty, which are important for a textile to be wearable.

The researcher­s altered nanoPE through a number of processes in order to make it into a suitable human cloth.

They first created microholes as thin as human hairs with commonly used microneedl­e punching, resembling the spacing betweenthe yarns in woven cotton textiles.

Because the hole is so small, the visual opacity is not affected. The wicking rate and the mechanical strength of the new material also are comparable to cotton, according to the study.

To make the thin material more fabric-like, the researcher­s created a threelayer material with two sheets of treated polyethyle­ne sandwichin­g a cotton mesh for strength and thickness.

They then tested the cooling effect of nanoPE with a device that simulated the heat output of skin. The material increases the simulated skin temperatur­e lessthanco­tton, theysaid.

Though the temperatur­e difference is small, itcanmake a difference for air conditioni­ng setpoints, the researcher­s said, which means someone dressed in the new material may not feel the need to turn on the air conditione­r. being

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