How China is solving F-22’s stealth coating cracks with 3,000-year-old silk weaving tech

While US stealth fighters like the F-22 Raptor grapple with delaminating radar-absorbent coatings – a vulnerability likened to “moulting cicada wings” – China claims to have found an ancient solution for its fifth-generation jets.

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Recent revelations by defence industry researchers suggest that cutting-edge stealth technology aboard China’s smooth-skinned stealth fighters may owe its resilience to a 3,000-year-old textile innovation: the art of silk jacquard weaving.

Modern stealth aircraft, including the F-22 and F-35, rely on layered coatings to deflect radar signals. But these materials degrade rapidly under stress.

US maintenance logs reveal that even minor abrasions from high-speed flight or desert sandstorms can slash stealth efficacy, forcing crews to reapply radar-absorbent materials (RAM) every three weeks at costs exceeding US$60,000 per flight hour, according to some US media reports.

Plus, in regions like Florida, humidity exacerbates bonding issues, while corrosion near coastal bases further compromises performance.

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Chinese aerospace engineers have long criticised such band-aid approaches. Instead, they sought a structural solution – something woven into the material’s bones.

According to a study published last month in Chinese peer-reviewed journal Knitting Industries, the answer lies in a dual-layer composite fabric inspired by Han dynasty (206BC-AD220) jacquard looms – a silk-weaving technique dating back to 200BC.

  

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