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Friday, February 17, 2006

Fruit of the Nano-Loom

New textiles tap polymer science to both trap and kill toxins -- all while wicking away sweat.

By Aditi Risbud

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By exploiting chemistry and nanotechnology, researchers are creating a new generation of clothes that do more than look fashionable and keep the wearer warm. Already, stores are selling pants that resist stains thanks to coatings made of "nanowhiskers," and odor-eating socks that trap microbes using nanoparticles.

Now, scientists are developing clothing for military and medical applications that seem to do it all: block toxins, kill bacteria on the surface, and breathe sufficiently to allow perspiration to escape.

The latest advance, a collaboration between researchers at Cornell University and the University of California, Davis, stitches together porous membranes and bacteria-killing polymer molecules. The results could provide enhanced performance for situations where resistance to liquid or vapor is needed, such as for medical personnel or soldiers exposed to pathogens. The researchers plan to test their new fabric on medical and military staff this year, and to commercialize the fabric by 2008.

"There has been a lot of work in textiles to come up with combinations of materials that give high functional properties," says Kay Obendorf, a textiles chemistry professor at Cornell who specializes in the surface chemistry of fibers. "We need a material that will be a barrier to bacteria while changing its toxicity level."

The latest work had its genesis in 2000, when Gang Sun, a professor of textiles and clothing at the University of California, Davis, invented a method for attaching chlorine-containing polymer molecules, called halamides, to textile fibers. These molecules kill bacteria almost instantly on contact. "Halamides are chemically the same as the disinfectant used in swimming pools," Sun says. "They are safe for contact with the skin, kill bacteria, and absorb odor."

With this technology, Sun created prototype "odor-free" socks in 2000, and showed that bacteria-battling halamides could be re-activated by simply adding some household bleach to the wash. In 2001, he licensed the technology to Vanson HaloSource, a Redmond, WA-based bioscience company that uses halamide-based technology for commercial applications. Vanson HaloSource has successfully developed anti-bacterial bed sheets and cotton pads for medical use, and it has also given Sun nearly $400,000 to continue his research.

Sun said he knew that the military had already developed protective clothing using porous membranes to stop the penetration of biological agents like bacteria. But some agents would still be stuck on the outside surface of the uniform, which could lead to a contamination threat. By teaming up with Obendorf in 2005, Sun built on this existing technology by attaching halamide molecules to porous membranes. These hybrid materials will now be applied as a coating to fabric, thereby trapping and killing deadly agents such as anthrax.

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Comments

  • Protective clothing on it's way!
    Guest (sunshinestaralight) on 02/24/2006 at 12:00 AM
    Posts:
    1
    We desperately need something like this.  I would like to know when it will be available to the general public and where I could buy it.
    Rate this comment: 12345
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