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Home NEWS Science News Chemistry

Stretching This Polymer Transforms Its Ability to Conduct Heat

Bioengineer by Bioengineer
February 9, 2026
in Chemistry
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In a groundbreaking development that could revolutionize thermal management technologies, engineers at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology have uncovered an extraordinary property in a commonplace polymer, enabling its thermal conductivity to be dynamically modulated through mechanical stretching. This novel discovery unveils a material whose heat conduction capacity can be toggled in real time, shifting from thermal characteristics akin to plastic—a notoriously low thermal conductor—to performance approaching that of marble, which efficiently dissipates heat. Such a material opens pathways for innovative applications across wearable technology, electronics cooling, and energy-efficient architectural components.

Conventional understanding dictates that a material’s thermal conductivity is largely fixed, intrinsic to its molecular composition and crystalline structure. Plastics, for example, exhibit inherently poor thermal transport owing to their disordered molecular chains, whereas crystalline materials such as marble facilitate rapid phonon transport, allowing heat to move freely. Modifying these properties traditionally requires laborious re-synthesis or compositional alteration. MIT’s current research overturns this paradigm by demonstrating a polymer fiber whose conductive capabilities multiply upon stretching and revert instantaneously when released, all without altering its chemical makeup.

At the core of this phenomenon is an olefin block copolymer (OBC), a widely used soft, flexible polymer with vast commercial prevalence. When rapidly elongated, the polymer’s microscopic carbon-hydrogen chain configurations realign, enabling a dramatic enhancement in thermal conductivity exceeding twofold increases. The transition occurs with unprecedented speed—within 0.22 seconds—marking it as the fastest thermally switchable material reported to date. This reversible tuning of heat transport offers enticing prospects for adaptive environments, where materials could intuitively respond to temperature fluctuations by adjusting their thermal dissipation.

The implications of a thermally tunable polymer are multifaceted. Apparel embedded with such fibers could dynamically modulate insulation, instantly ramping up heat conduction to cool the body during exertion, or retaining warmth at rest. Similarly, integrating these fibers within electronic devices could mitigate overheating by adjusting thermal pathways as needed, thereby enhancing reliability and longevity. In architectural engineering, this responsive material technology could reduce energy costs associated with climate control through self-regulating thermal management within walls or windows.

The foundational mechanism lies in the polymer’s microstructural response to mechanical strain. Unlike traditional thermally conductive materials that depend on highly ordered crystal lattices, this olefin block copolymer primarily resides in an amorphous state—a tangled mesh of polymer chains that hinders efficient phonon propagation. Stretching aligns these chains, reducing structural disorder, and effectively creates “highways” for heat to flow along vibrational modes. Upon release, the system relaxes back into its disorganized amorphous configuration, restoring the baseline low conductivity.

Interestingly, this research trajectory diverges from previous efforts aimed at polyethylene fibers seeking to enhance thermal transport through promoting a permanent crystalline phase transition. While prior work achieved increased conductivity by untangling polymer chains into ordered structures, such changes were irreversible, limiting their utility for dynamic thermal management. By contrast, the OBC’s persistent amorphous nature permits rapid, repeatable cycling of conductive states, imparting versatile adaptability for real-world applications.

To elucidate this behavior, the team employed sophisticated spectroscopic techniques, including X-ray and Raman scattering, which revealed that stretching induces subtle realignments without triggering full crystallization. The crystalline domains scattered within the material reorient to support heat conduction, while the amorphous tangles straighten sufficiently to enhance vibrational delocalization, facilitating phonon transport. This delicate balance between order and disorder under mechanical strain underpins the swift and reversible tuning of thermal properties.

Such remarkable performance arises from carbon atoms forming the polymer backbone, known for their exceptional ability to conduct heat when arranged linearly. However, disorder typically impedes this potential; the team’s insight was to harness elasticity to transiently orchestrate alignment at the microscopic scale. This fundamentally shifts how materials scientists might design polymers, focusing on flexible architectures that leverage strain-induced structural transitions for multifunctional thermal responses.

The speed of thermal switching represents another critical advancement. Achieving a doubling of thermal conductivity within just fractions of a second enables real-time adaptability, essential for responsive textiles or electronics subjected to rapid temperature variations. Most prior materials with tunable thermal properties exhibit sluggish dynamics or require external stimuli like temperature or electric fields, making this mechanically actuated modality uniquely practical and energy efficient.

Looking forward, the researchers aim to push the limits further—optimizing the polymer’s molecular design to amplify the thermal conductivity range even closer to that of diamond, which boasts exceptional heat conduction. Such breakthroughs would have profound societal and industrial impacts, from more sustainable wearables that reduce cooling energy consumption to smarter electronics and resilient infrastructure better equipped to handle climate extremes.

The discovery also aligns with wider sustainability goals by exploring alternatives to petroleum-based spandex with materials that offer recyclability and eco-friendliness, filling an urgent need in the textile industry. Moreover, the ability to cycle thermal performance over thousands of deformation iterations without degradation signifies robustness crucial for commercial viability.

This work was accomplished with support from a range of institutions including the U.S. Department of Energy and the Office of Naval Research Global, leveraging facilities at MIT.nano and interdisciplinary collaborations spanning polymer chemistry, materials science, and mechanical engineering. By systematically exploring the interplay between polymer microstructure, mechanical strain, and thermal transport, this research opens a new chapter in the design of smart materials capable of dynamically interfacing with their thermal environment.

As we enter an era increasingly defined by the intertwining of digital technology, environmental concerns, and human comfort, materials that can intelligently manage heat flow on demand will be indispensable. This thermally tunable olefin block copolymer symbolizes a strategic leap towards adaptive materials that respond as quickly and intuitively as the world around them, embedding responsiveness directly within their molecular architecture.

—

Subject of Research: Thermally tunable polymers, olefin block copolymers, dynamic thermal conductivity
Article Title: “Strain-Tunable Thermal Conductivity in Largely Amorphous Poly-olefin Fibers via Alignment-Induced Vibrational Delocalization”
Web References: https://advanced.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/adma.202520371
Image Credits: Courtesy of Svetlana Boriskina

Keywords

Materials science, materials engineering, polymer engineering, textile engineering, thermal conductivity, electromagnetic properties, polymers, fibers, textiles, materials processing, materials testing

Tags: architectural thermal performancedynamic thermal management technologieselectronics cooling solutionsenergy-efficient materialsheat conduction in polymersinnovative material applicationsmechanical stretching effectsMIT polymer researcholefin block copolymer propertiesreal-time material properties transformationthermal conductivity modulationwearable technology advancements

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