Login für Abonnenten

Please log in to read subscribed content.




  • Contents
  • Events
  • Editorial team
  • Media
  • Newsletter
textile network
textile network
  • News
  • Technical Textiles
  • Fashion
  • Home Textiles
  • Business
  • Issues digital
search.box
  • Contents
    • News
    • Technical Textiles
    • Fashion
    • Home Textiles
    • Business
    • Issues digital
  • Events
  • Editorial team
  • Media
  • Newsletter

02/04/2024 – RMIT University

Nanodiamonds could hold key to cool clothing

Researchers from RMIT University are using nanodiamonds to create smart textiles that can cool people down faster. The study found fabric made from cotton coated with nanodiamonds, using a method called electrospinning, showed a reduction of 2-3 degrees Celsius during the cooling down process compared to untreated cotton.

Previous image
Researchers.jpg

Research supervisor and RMIT Senior lecturer Dr Xin Wang, Lead researcher and RMIT research assistant Dr Aisha Rehman and Project leader and RMIT Senior Lecturer Dr Shadi Houshyar. Aisha is holding pink cotton that´s been treated with nanodiamonds. Everyone is wearing white lab coats and protective goggles. © Cherry Cai, RMIT University

 
Nanodiamonds.jpg

A sample of pink cotton fabric that´s been treated with nanodiamonds (left) next to untreated cotton (right). A hand wearing blue disposable gloves is carrying a petri dish of detonated nanodiamond powder. © Cherry Cai, RMIT University

 
Researchers.jpg

Research supervisor and RMIT Senior lecturer Dr Xin Wang, Lead researcher and RMIT research assistant Dr Aisha Rehman and Project leader and RMIT Senior Lecturer Dr Shadi Houshyar. Aisha is holding pink cotton that´s been treated with nanodiamonds. Everyone is wearing white lab coats and protective goggles. © Cherry Cai, RMIT University

 
Back to article

Further articles for:

  • Cooling
  • Fabrics
  • Research
  • Universities

RMIT University

  Show company
  • Most read
  • Latest

31/03/2026

Advanced materials for defence PPE

Defence Textiles at Techtextil/Texprocess

By  Daniel Keienburg

31/03/2026

Advertisement

POLYAVIN bPEN: CHT's polyethylene dispersion made from sugar cane as a climate-friendly alternative

CHT Germany GmbH

02/04/2026

Dienes at Techtextil

Bio-based materials in technical textiles

By  Antje Schmidtpeter

16/03/2026

In Geneva from 19 to 22 May

Index 26 demonstrates the innovative strength of the global nonwovens industry

By  Antje Schmidtpeter

01/04/2026

From Digital Experimentation to Operational Requirement

Garment Printing Trends 2026

By Debbie McKeegan, CEO, Texintel

06/04/2026

OdorCrunch2.0 made for Modern Fabrics

Polygiene is expanding its portfolio

By  Antje Schmidtpeter

05/04/2026

Know-how on AI and Circularity

IVGT Joint Stand at Techtextil 2026

By  Daniel Keienburg

04/04/2026

Milan Design Week 2026

Kornit Tech Drives New Prototypes

By  Editorial staff

03/04/2026

Techtextil 2026

Emtec presents TSA at Techtextil Frankfurt

By  Daniel Keienburg

02/04/2026

Dienes at Techtextil

Bio-based materials in technical textiles

By  Antje Schmidtpeter

  • Meisenbach Verlag
  • Media
  • Data security
  • Imprint
  • Instagram
  • LinkedIn
  • RSS Feed
Meisenbach Logo