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posted by Fnord666 on Tuesday March 14 2017, @01:19PM   Printer-friendly
from the mood-clothing dept.

Pickup line, circa 2030: "Do my pants think it's hot in here, or is it just you?"

Imagine a single-coloured piece of cloth that suddenly displays a colourful pattern when the ambient temperature changes. Upon further temperature change, a completely different pattern shows up.

[...] Marjan Kooroshnia began her research on already existing descriptions of leuco dye-based thermochromic inks; below their activation temperature they are coloured, and above their activation temperature they are clear or have a light hue. In addition, they are usually blended with static pigments, allowing them to change from one colour to another.

[...] After a lot of testing in the printing lab, she managed to mix the inks so that they looked similar when they were in a non-heated state and they change to different colours as result of increasing temperature.

Then, she explored thermochromic inks with different activation temperatures in order to create a wide spectrum of colours that would appear at different temperatures. She used thermochromic inks with activation temperatures of 27, 37 and 47°C to create a dynamic pattern that colour changing effects that appear in sequence due to increasing temperature; for example, the pattern has one colour at 27°C, another colour at 37°C and another colour at 47°C.

Or will it take off as a uniform that's white when it's cold, and camouflage pattern when it's hot?


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  • (Score: 2) by Zinho on Tuesday March 14 2017, @04:57PM

    by Zinho (759) on Tuesday March 14 2017, @04:57PM (#478990)

    We had fabrics like this back in the 1990s (or was it the 80s?).

    I loved my Hypercolor shirts! I'm remembering late 80s for this; by 1990 no one in my hometown was selling or wearing them.

    In addition to the armpit emphasis, they also had longevity issues. It only took one run in the dryer at high temperature to lock it into the high-temp color phase permanently. I have to wonder if the developer has figured that problem out. Presumably yes, since the article summary lists temps as high as 47 oC, but time will tell. I don't think I want anything that hot touching my skin as clothing, though...

    I personally wouldn't mind a new Hypercolor Mk2 shirt with three color modes, it's about time that trend came back into fashion :)

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