Engineers from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), in collaboration with the Rhode Island School of Design (RISD), have developed an acoustic fabric capable of interacting with its wearer
What if tomorrow, a simple jacket could guide a hearing-impaired person through public transport, monitor our vital signs, or act as a smartphone? The idea may seem crazy, but it is already a reality. A team of researchers has developed an acoustic fabric modelled on the human auditory system that functions as a microphone.
Climate change is an urgent issue, and the fashion industry is coming up with new fabrics that are more sustainable and have less impact on the environment. But the future of fashion could also be shaped by intelligent fabrics. Engineers from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), in collaboration with the Rhode Island School of Design (RISD), have developed an acoustic fabric capable of interacting with its wearer. This is quite an achievement considering that most fabrics are nowadays conceived of as sound dampeners. But this discovery could potentially improve the daily lives of millions of people around the world.
To achieve this feat, the engineers started from the observation that fabrics vibrate in response to audible sounds, but that these vibrations are not usually detectable. The objective was therefore to make them perceptible. This was made possible thanks to the development of a "flexible fiber" capable, when woven into a fabric, of bending with the fabric, as would "seaweed on the surface of the ocean."
"The fiber is designed from a 'piezoelectric' material that produces an electrical signal when bent or mechanically deformed, providing a means for the fabric to convert sound vibrations into electrical signals," the authors of this research explain. Not content with being able to capture all types of sound, including those least perceptible, the acoustic fabric can also determine the direction of sound, and even generate sounds that can be detected by other fabrics.