While it is likely to be far from going into production for consumers, the material may end up helping to replace bulky Holter EKG monitors in medical settings and heart rate watch and chest straps for athletes, in addition to ‘other potential uses.
The Rice University lab first developed carbon nanotube fiber in 2013 and has studied its use in medical procedures, such as cochlear implants for hearing loss and to repair damaged hearts. But at the time, the original filaments (about 22 microns wide) were too thin to be used by a standard sewing machine.
For this last iteration, the researchers worked with a rope maker to weave the filaments into a material similar to normal sewing thread that could be sewn into sportswear. The resulting “smart” t-shirt provides “soft, portable, dry sensors for continuous, non-invasive electrocardiogram control,” according to the study. (However, it’s worth noting that existing EKG monitors have improved to become quite comfortable and unobtrusive).
With some modifications, clothing with these fibers could end up tracking other vital signs, according to the researchers.
However, “smart” t-shirts aren’t completely cordless. An example shows the nanotube fibers in the jacket that feed the signals to the cables at the bottom that transmit information via Bluetooth technology to a computer.
“You just can’t find soft, flexible, spinning materials that are comfortable to the touch, that you can work with, that you can build a bridge from, or that you can build a power line from, but you can also run through a sewing machine.” , said Oliver Dewy, a member of the research team. “Nothing else behaves like that.”