Liquid Crystalline Soft Matter

Wearable technology


A rapidly growing trend constituting an enticing convergence science challenge is the transfer of high technology into the clothes we wear or other textiles surrounding us in our daily lives. The implications of this development are enormous and as our textile materials turn smarter, providing advanced functions that we today would not at all connect to textiles, we may expect a fundamental change to our society and the way we live. This is one of the reasons why the research field brings together an exceptionally broad range of actors, ranging from natural scientists and engineers to psychologists, designers and artists.

The field has developed tremendously in the last few years with several large companies now offering the first simple mass produced items that can be regarded as wearable technology, primarily in the field of sports clothing and shoe wear. Several small companies specializing on wearable technology and smart textiles have also emerged, many offering products for sale, albeit on a smaller scale. In academia we find strong activities around the world at several art and design institutions as well as at interdisciplinary and some traditional scientific research institutions.

It is the ambition for the work in the SNM lab on production of functional and responsive composite fibers by electrospinning to provide new smart textile materials that can find use in wearable technology. This research thrust has just started and it will be exciting to see how in particular liquid crystal-functionalized textiles can be used in this context. To this end, we are starting up a collaboration with Prof. Younghui Kim, Hongik University, an artist and researcher at the very forefront of the development in wearable technology art.

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