Personal Moisture Management by Advanced Textiles and Intelligent Wearables

Research output: Journal article publicationReview articleAcademic researchpeer-review

4 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

As global climate change intensifies, personal moisture management (PMM) is increasingly crucial for regulating body temperature and near-skin humidity, sustaining comfort, health, and productivity. Advances in textile materials and wearable technologies are moving PMM beyond traditional wicking-drying and waterproof-breathable designs toward directional sweat transport, stimuli-responsive control, and integration with personal thermal management (PTM). Advanced textiles and intelligent wearables enable more efficient, adaptive PMM; meanwhile, effective PMM enhances sensing performance and long-term comfort of wearable systems, and supports sweat-based health monitoring and energy harvesting, forming closed-loop, intelligent comfort-health-performance ecosystems. This review critically discusses PMM mechanisms and designs from capillary wicking and evaporation/diffusion to directional water transport and responsive moisture regulation, alongside manufacturing strategies spanning advanced fibers, nanoengineering, bioinspired architectures, smart polymers, and wearable electronics. PMM-enabled implementations in health monitoring and energy harvesting are introduced, and elucidate coupled moisture-heat transport to guide the co-optimization of PMM and PTM. Finally, key challenges are outlined, including sweat accumulation, reduced durability and washability, limited manufacturing scalability, and insufficient cross‑scenario adaptability, and offer potential solutions, particularly AI‑enabled pathways for intelligent, sustainable, next‑generation PMM textiles and wearables.

Original languageEnglish
Article numbere08831
JournalAdvanced Materials
Volume37
Issue number48
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 3 Dec 2025

Keywords

  • advanced textiles
  • directional liquid transport
  • intelligent wearable technologies
  • personal moisture management
  • personal thermal management

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • General Materials Science
  • Mechanics of Materials
  • Mechanical Engineering

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Personal Moisture Management by Advanced Textiles and Intelligent Wearables'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this