Cooling Garments

Smart clothing for thermal control of the human body.

Project

Humans need to control their body temperature within a restricted temperature range in order to function properly and clothing plays an important role in this thermoregulation process. The most simple strategy humans use to cope with fluctuating thermal conditions is to change clothing whenever the conditions change. We take out our sweater when we get warm during running or when the sun starts to shine and we put on our thick coat when we go outside in winter. There are, however, a series of occasions where it is difficult, undesirable or impossible to change clothing in order to respond properly to fluctuations in external or internal conditions, for example: hot environments where the body needs sealed protection (Ebola suits, fire fighters), sports in warm environments (hockey, football, cycling, etc), medical: local cooling of injuries and hot flashes workers in rapidly changing thermal conditions (fork lift drivers).


In this project you will develop new and innovative solutions for clothing which can actively control the body temperature. This will not only give people more comfort in hot or cold environments but is also intended for professional users which are exposed to extreme conditions for a longer time and still have to perform within the safety limits, for sportsmen striving to improve their performance and for patients requiring cooling of specific body parts.

The new cooling solution in this proposal is based on the human blood circulation system itself. We intend to integrate an artificial external system of flexible tubes equipped with 3D printed valve sections in a garment. During body movements the tubes are continuously compressed and released and since the valves only allow the fluid to flow in one direction, the result is a net flow which can be used to spread the heat towards previously selected body parts. In this way we create a radically new cooling method which uses the human body energy to power the fluid circulation system.
The design and test this cooling system and produce a functional prototype which will be used for further research and testing.

RESEARCH TEAM

This project is part of the STW Smart Clothing project of the Emerging Materials chair in which the AMFI (Amsterdam Fashion Institute), as well as Inuteq (personal cooling apparel), Teijin Aramid (heat resistant fibers) and Tanatex (cooling sizings for textile) are involved.

Linda Plaude

COOL SUIT

Design by Linda Plaude & Joshua Stewart

The suit designed for rowers, makes use of a tubing system that transports fluid past the main muscles to cool the body during exercise.

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6 december 2017

Project Info

Startdatum 01 apr 2016
Einddatum 01 apr 2018

Contact

Laura Duncker