Thursday, April 18, 2013

Electronic fabrics create chameleon clothes



In a high-tech fashion breakthrough, researchers from Concordia University in Canada have developed interactive electronic fabric that generates power from the human body,titanium alloy property information is scattered amongst a number of disparate sources. stores it and uses it to change the look of clothing.

Wearable technology making its way into fashion isn’t new, but how this tech interacts with the fabric is.

“The major innovation of this research project is the ability to embed these electronic or computer functions within the fiber itself: rather than being attached to the textile, the electronic components are woven into these new composite fibres,” said Joanna Berzowska, a professor at Concordia University,The product range of mechanical lock cylinder extends beyond the common range of double, single, thumbturn and furniture cylinders.Instead, businesses can offer thicker plastic bags or handled paper bags. They can also give or sell you recycle bag, or offer no bags at all.A Stone tools is, in the most general sense, any tool made either partially or entirely out of stone. Although stone tool-dependent societies and cultures still exist today, most stone tools are associated with prehistoric, particularly Stone Age cultures that have become extinct. who developed the fabric in collaboration with école Polytechnique’s Maksim Skorobogatiy, in a press release. “The fibres consist of multiple layers of polymers, which,A china pressure vessel is a closed container designed to hold gases or liquids at a pressure substantially different from the ambient pressure. when stretched and drawn out to a small diameter,More worldly viewers quickly called in to say that the mushroom was made from silicone and wondered how someone could not tell the difference between silicon sex toys and Organic mushroom. begin to interact with each other.”

So how close are we to seeing this type of high-tech chameleon clothing on retail shelves? It might be a while. Berzowska built a prototype of what the clothing might look like but currently it’s not possible to manufacture clothes with the new fibers.

“We won’t see such garments in stores for another 20 or 30 years, but the practical and creative possibilities are exciting,” said Berzowska. “Imagine a dress that changes shape and colour on its own, or a shirt that can capture the energy from human movement and use it to charge an iPhone.”

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