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Gold-coated fabric that emits own light could be ultimate safety

    • 629 posts
    January 9, 2021 6:14 AM EET

    Stretchable, light-emitting clothing made from fabric coated in gold could be a smart alternative to high-visibility gear – not to mention a bold fashion statement.To get more news about metallic fabric cloth, you can visit mesh-fabrics official website.

    Tricia Carmichael at the University of Windsor, Canada, and her colleagues started with a fabric that is 87 per cent nylon and 13 per cent spandex. They then added a very thin coating of gold to act as an electrode and send power to a light-emitting material made of zinc sulphide, copper and silicone.

    The fabric as a whole is semi-transparent, so light can shine through it easily. Carmichael says it has big advantages over existing high-visibility gear, which relies on the reflection of streetlights or headlights.“Self-illuminating clothing will always be visible from every angle and in any lighting condition,” she says. “This could be important for safety apparel.”

    But it will be a while before such light-emitting clothes hit the shops, as the current version requires an unfashionable battery pack about the size of a deck of cards.

    “What we’re working on now is how do you better integrate that functionality right into the textile, so that it’s not a hard, plastic box that you have to wear,” says Carmichael. One option would be to harvest energy directly from the movement of the wearer’s body, she says. Having clothing that can light up without requiring an external light source would be valuable,” says Clara Barker at the University of Oxford, but the team will need to look at durability, cost and battery life, she says. “A heavy, poor lasting or unreliable battery will be a critical factor in the success of this technology.”

    Hazel Assender, also at the University of Oxford, says it will be important to consider the environmental impact of clothing with built-in electronics. “What would be the functional lifetime of this fabric?” she says. “What are the implications for recycling [and] degradability of the fabric at the end of use?”