American physicists have created nanomaterials that can be heated to comfortable temperatures even in the harshest Arctic weather, using the energy of a conventional AA-battery. This material, commissioned by the US Army, scientists presented at the annual meeting of the American Chemical Society in Washington.
Using both of these ideas, scientists created a cotton cloth that can heat itself up to 37 degrees Celsius in just a minute, using a relatively weak AA-battery or battery from the wristwatch, popmech.ru reports. Gloves made of such a fabric will be much lighter and thinner than their woolen, leather or synthetic counterparts, which will allow soldiers to better transfer loads and manifest themselves in combat.
According to scientists, nanowires can withstand several washes and other heavy mechanical loads, which allows using such warm clothing in "combat" conditions. Now D'Angelo is trying to create synthetic analogs of a similar "nanomaterial" that would be more resistant to the load than cotton, and try to combine it with another nanomaterial, particles of a hydrogel from polyethylene glycol that absorbs water and other sweat components well. Their combination, as the scientists hope, will make similar gloves and other clothes from such a fabric compatible with any climatic conditions.
In the future, as scientists believe, this fabric can be used not only in the US Army, but also manufacturers of warm clothes for civilians and lovers of extreme rest.