Search for dissertations about: "smart textile"
Showing result 6 - 10 of 33 swedish dissertations containing the words smart textile.
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6. Dynamic Textile Patterns: designing with smart textiles
Abstract : New smart textile materials have been investigated and show that today`s textile patterns can be designed to offer more than traditional textile patterns do. The prototypes of dynamic textile patterns designed in this thesis are brought about in a new design process that takes smart textile materials into consideration. READ MORE
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7. Melt spun piezoelectric textile fibres : an experimental study
Abstract : Melt Spun Piezoelectric Textile Fibres - an Experimental Study ANJA LUND Department of Materials and Manufacturing Technology Chalmers University of Technology ABSTRACT The manufacturing and characterisation of piezoelectric textile fibres are described in this thesis. A piezoelectric material is one that generates an electric voltage when deformed, a property which exists in a number of materials. READ MORE
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8. Ink Jetting of Photochromic Ink : Towards the Design of a Smart Textile Sensor
Abstract : Smart textiles have been a hot topic in research for several decades; however, comparatively few products can be found on the market. Resource-efficient processes can boost the breakthrough of smart and functional textiles, which often necessitate high-cost materials and only require small batches. READ MORE
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9. On the elements of E-textiles : Fabrication and characterisation of textile routing and electrodes
Abstract : “Smart textile” as a notion was demarcated approximately 25 years ago, leading to an enthusiastic hype around the research. Both academic efforts and members of the maker community developed prototypes and artistic creations that incorporated smart features into textiles. READ MORE
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10. Electrically conductive textile coatings with PEDOT:PSS
Abstract : In smart textiles, electrical conductivity is often required for several functions, especially contacting (electroding) and interconnecting. This thesis explores electrically conductive textile surfaces made by combining conventional textile coating methods with the intrinsically conductive polymer complex poly(3,4-ethylene dioxythiophene)-poly(styrene sulfonate) (PEDOT:PSS). READ MORE