Smart Jacket Uses AI To Keep You Comfortable
A "smart" jacket equipped with environmental sensors and AI can control temperature and prevent overheating.

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Electronic textiles, such as heating pads and electric blankets, can keep the wearer warm and help ease aches and pains. However, prolonged use of these devices could cause heat-related illnesses, including hyperthermia or burns. Recently, a group of researchers designed and tested a “smart” jacket equipped with environmental sensors, heat-generating and color-changing yarns, and artificial intelligence (AI) to control temperature and prevent overheating. Their results are published in ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces.
Some electronic textiles, or e-textiles, have sensors that can monitor the wearer’s heart rate, blood pressure and movement, or can connect via Bluetooth to mobile apps that control temperature. Yet, even with technological advances, users can still be injured by these products. Older people are especially prone to heat-related injuries because of decreased heat sensitivity, and residents of nursing homes and assisted living communities are vulnerable because their temperatures cannot always be easily or frequently monitored by healthcare providers. Jeanne Tan and collaborators believed they could improve e-textile safety by combining AI-driven systems with thermochromic yarn to create a fabric that warms the user without overheating and provides immediate temperature readings for easy monitoring.
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Subscribe for FREEIn a demonstration, the thermochromic and optical fiber yarns in the jacket accurately indicated heating temperature, and the jacket’s AI component predicted a comfortable temperature and provided consistent heating for the wearer, even when the environment changed. In the future, the team says their e-textile technology could be used in various applications, from heated car seats and furniture to spacesuits.
Reference: Lee C, Tan J, Tan JJ, Tang HT, Yu WS, Lam NYK. Intelligent thermochromic heating e-textile for personalized temperature control in healthcare. ACS Appl Mater Interfaces. 2025;17(3):5515-5526. doi: 10.1021/acsami.4c19174
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