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PolyU researchers develop new magnetorheological textiles

15 Jan '26
2 min read
PolyU researchers develop new magnetorheological textiles
Pic: The Hong Kong Polytechnic University

Insights

  • Researchers at The Hong Kong Polytechnic University have developed soft magnetorheological textiles that flexibly deform and change mechanical properties under low, human-safe magnetic fields.
  • Lightweight, breathable, and programmable, the materials overcome limitations of traditional magnetic textiles and enable applications in smart wearables, soft robotics, and haptic technologies.
A research team of The Hong Kong Polytechnic University (PolyU) has achieved a revolutionary breakthrough in smart materials, by successfully developing soft magnetorheological textiles that can flexibly deform and modulate their mechanical properties under a human-safe magnetic field. Driven by electricity and programmable control, these new materials combine lightweight, flexible and breathable textile characteristics, making them widely applicable in smart wearables, soft robotics, virtual reality and metaverse haptic experiences.

Traditional magnetorheological materials have long faced two major drawbacks: heavy magnetic powders and the potential health risks posed by high-strength magnetic fields to the human body. Prof. Tao Xiaoming, director of the PolyU Research Institute for Intelligent Wearable Systems, Vincent and Lily Woo, professor in textiles technology and chair professor of Textile Technology of the School of Fashion and Textiles, who led the research, elaborated, “The core objective of our research team is to overcome the application limits of traditional magnetorheological technology, extending it to fibre form, and enabling precise intelligent modulation while remaining compatible with textile properties such as softness and breathability.”

The research team fabricated soft magnetic polymer composite fibres – just 57 micrometers in diameter – by uniformly dispersing magnetic powders in a plastic material (a low-density polyethylene matrix). These fibres not only achieve precise control under low-strength magnetic fields but also solve the problem of heavy magnetic powders. Furthermore, they can be spun into yarns and multi-layer fabrics to realise large-area, controllable deformation.

Unlike traditional smart materials that respond to scalar stimuli such as voltage, current or temperature, these in-house-developed magnetorheological textiles offer unique directionally controllable responses, enabling the development of the following three innovative fabric materials, the study said.

“The key breakthrough of this research lies in converting traditional rigid magnetic devices into flexible alternatives. This success can be extended to the development of hard magnetic fibre materials, laying a foundation for the next generation of soft robotics, electromagnetic devices and wearable technologies,” explained Xiaoming.

Regarding the prospects for industrialisation, Dr PU Junhong, assistant professor (research) of the School of Fashion and Textiles, said, “From raw material selection to processing technology, we have taken industrialisation needs into consideration. We adopt commodity-grade, mass production-ready raw materials and mature processing techniques, paving the way for rapid translation in fields such as food production, medical rehabilitation and metaverse interaction.”


 

ALCHEMPro News Desk (RR)

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