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HTTP/2 200 date: Tue, 23 Nov 2021 15:16:15 GMT content-type: text/html; charset=UTF-8 cf-ray: 6b2b5b8ceaac585a-IAD age: 9971 cache-control: max-age=0 expires: Tue, 23 Nov 2021 12:27:38 GMT last-modified: Tue, 23 Nov 2021 12:27:38 GMT link: ; rel="https://api.w.org/", ; rel="alternate"; type="application/json", ; rel=shortlink vary: X-Forwarded-Proto,Accept-Encoding cf-cache-status: HIT cf-apo-via: tcache cf-edge-cache: cache,platform=wordpress expect-ct: max-age=604800, report-uri="https://report-uri.cloudflare.com/cdn-cgi/beacon/expect-ct" permissions-policy: interest-cohort=() report-to: {"endpoints":[{"url":"https:\/\/a.nel.cloudflare.com\/report\/v3?s=s3cxDbWVPvWXzc2%2B54RAewDJ%2B7isGHGKGZZT%2B%2BtktDSVOHH43mxjuyCepX6j85h0mcjRJuW1lszSqAcc7qfXLxbEMvk%2BCfaTTispFI5GYJM%2BaDbsgCvfXda2NU3voA%3D%3D"}],"group":"cf-nel","max_age":604800} nel: {"success_fraction":0,"report_to":"cf-nel","max_age":604800} server: cloudflare alt-svc: h3=":443"; ma=86400, h3-29=":443"; ma=86400, h3-28=":443"; ma=86400, h3-27=":443"; ma=86400 Researchers use extended-range NFC to develop smart fabric for multiple use cases • NFCW

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By Tom Phillips[2] • Updated nfcw.com[3]

Smart fabric with extended-range NFCSmart fabric with extended-range NFC
Engineers at the University of California, Irvine[4] (UCI) in the US have used extended-range NFC to produce a battery-free smart fabric that could enable items of clothing to communicate with each other and with nearby electronic devices at distances of “more than four feet”.

The ‘“body area network” enabling fabric could be integrated into garments such as hospital gowns and sportswear to monitor and transmit health data or into other clothing that would allow the wearer to open and start their car, gain access to buildings or make purchases “with a high five or handshake”, the research team says.

“If you’ve held your smartphone or charge card close to a reader to pay for a purchase, you have taken advantage of near-field signalling technologies. Our fabrics work on the same principle, but we’ve extended the range significantly,” UCI assistant professor Peter Tseng explains.

“This means you could potentially keep your phone in your pocket, and just by brushing your body against other textiles or readers, power and information can be transferred to and from your device.”

The research

Read more from our friends at NFC World