Hairs in homeothermic animals have multiple funcitons essential for survival such as regulation of body temperature and camouflage through adaptable reconfiguration in response to external environments. By contrast, humans wear...
Thermoregulation is an essential function of the human
body for
adapting to the surrounding temperature. Stimuli-responsive smart
textiles can provide effective protection of the human skin temperature
from a continuously changing environment. Herein, we develop a smart
textile based on shape memory polymer (SMP) fibers for adaptive regulation
of IR and water transmission on human skin. An SMP textile is fabricated
with hierarchical micro/nanoporous structures to enhance thermal insulation
performance, and silver nanowires are coated on one side to provide
asymmetric IR reflectivity and hydrophilicity. The porous SMP textile
shows great tunability of thermal insulation and asymmetric wettability
by deformation and recovery of the shape and structure in response
to stimuli. The degree of thermal insulation is controlled by 65.7%
of the original value, and the surface temperature of the SMP textile
on a hot plate is successfully controlled in the IR images due to
adaptive IR reflectivity. Additionally, the directional transportation
of water droplets can be switched on/off according to the shape of
the SMP textiles, which can be employed for sweat removal from the
human skin. This IR- and water-gating smart textile can provide a
feasible strategy for protecting the human skin from external environmental
changes.
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