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JACKET OF ALL TRADES
AC CHIC MIT graduate Kranthi Kiran Vistakula has designed lightweight apparel that can keep wearers cool in warm weather and vice versa THE HEAT EXCHANGERS WORK ON THE PRINCIPLE OF BREAKAGE OF HYDROGEN BONDS. IT MAKES THE EXCHANGER LIGHT. SO, THE JACKET ITSELF BECOMES LIGHTWEIGHT
It s the imminent heat making you edgy? Tired of wearing layers of woollens in winters? An innovaion to resolve your climate worries is being devised at the incubation centre of the National Institute of Design, Ahmedabad.
Kranthi Kiran Vistakula has created a jacket that promises to keep you cool when the mercury soars and warms you when temperatures hit sub-zero.
Weighing just 650 grams, it can main- tain body temperatures between 18 and 40 degree Celsius, he claims. A regula- tor in the jacket can be used to set the desired temperature within limits.
What's the science behind the climacon jacket?
We've put the Peltier effect into play, says Vistakula. The 29-year-old entre- preneur is referring to a theory pio- neered by French physicist Jean Charles Peltier in 1834. Peltier dis- covered that temperatures rise or fall at the junction of two dissimilar met- als carrying a small current, depend- ing upon the direction of the current.
To regulate temperatures, Vistakula put Peltier chips that work as heat exchangers at more than 20 points on the jacket. These plastic tiles, called Peltiers, are sewn on the inside of the jacket. Each Peltier is connected to a larger tile. Powered by batteries fitted on a belt, it can regulate inner tem- peratures, he explains.
To dissipate heat, the heat exchang- er uses hydrogen bonds rather than conventional methods such as a cooled liquid. A single charge of batteries lasts eight hours, adds Vistakula.
He realised the need for climate- resistant clothing in 2005 as a student of mechanical engineering at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
In Boston, during the winter, one has to endure multiple air zones. When it is freezing outside, one has to take off the layers inside centrally heated class- rooms. It got me thinking about the need for a jacket that would weather extreme temperatures.
By the time that he completed his Masters in 2007, Vistakula realised the challenge was in keeping the weight of the weight down. The first prototype weighed 3 kilos. Over three years, I launched a start-up called Dhama Innovations India that worked on the technology to keep it below a kilo.
Calling it his trade secret, Vistakula refuses to reveal how his team man- aged to keep the weight of the jacket in check. The heat exchangers that we've developed work on the principle of breakage of hydrogen bonds. It makes the exchanger lightweight. So, the jack- et itself becomes light. Made of cotton and polyster, it is lined with microfila- ment mesh with anti-bacterial prop- erties, is all that he would let on.
Backed by venture capitalists Mumbai Angels and Reliance Venture Asset Management, Vistakula has tied up with Tata Advanced Materials to supply weather-resistant lightweight jackets to the military. To begin with, we've given five variants to the Indian army on a trial basis. Plus, we are con- ducting trials for the Korean and US military, too, he says.
Growing up in Mahboobnagar near Hyderabad, Vistakula remembers read- ing about the Peltier effect in physics class. After his post-graduate degree in Mechanical Engineering and Technology Policy, he used it to launch a novel business idea.
Fashion designer David Abraham of the label Abraham and Thakore, known for its wearability, is impressed. This is an example of the role design plays in problem-solving. Vistakula's design solution harnesses scientific develop- ment to create products that will have a far ranging impact on specialised per- formance clothing.
Vistakula now wants to use the tech- nology in sports apparel. Who knows, by Season 4, your favourite IPL team could be donning climate-controlled jack- ets. They can wear it while warming up or during a game to reduce sweat.
JACKET OF ALL TRADES