Integrated Cooling (i-Cool) Textile of Heat Conduction and Sweat Transportation for Personal Perspiration Management
Yucan Peng (1), Wei Li (2), Bofei Liu (1), Joseph Schaadt (3,4), Jing, Tang (1), Guangmin Zhou (1), Weiliang Jin (2), Yangying Zhu (1), Guanyang, Wang (5), Wenxiao Huang (1), Chi Zhang (6), Tong Wu (1), Chris Dames (3,4),, Ravi Prasher (3,4), Shanhui Fan (2)

TL;DR
This paper introduces an innovative textile design that combines heat conduction and sweat transportation to enhance personal perspiration management, offering superior cooling and reduced dehydration compared to traditional fabrics.
Contribution
The study presents a novel integrated cooling textile with functional structures for improved sweat wicking, evaporation, and cooling, validated through experimental and practical application tests.
Findings
Superior evaporation rate over traditional textiles
Approximately 2.8°C cooling effect with less dehydration
Validated feasibility for real-world perspiration management
Abstract
Perspiration evaporation plays an indispensable role in human body heat dissipation. However, conventional textiles show limited perspiration management capability in moderate/profuse perspiration scenarios, i.e. low evaporation ability, ineffective evaporative cooling effect, and resultant human body dehydration and electrolyte disorder. Here, we propose a novel concept of integrated cooling (i-Cool) textile of heat conduction and sweat transportation for personal perspiration management based on unique functional structure design. By integrating heat conductive pathways and water transport channels decently, this textile not only shows the capability of liquid water wicking, but also exhibits superior evaporation rate than traditional textiles. Furthermore, compared with cotton, about 2.8 C cooling effect causing less than one third amount of dehydration has also been…
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