How A Mattress Actually Stays Cool All Night
Cooling is not about gimmicks—it's about engineering temperature regulation the right way. Many mattresses rely on cooling gels, chemical coatings, or "ice touch" fabrics that feel cool at first but absorb heat and then hold it. True cooling requires airflow, responsiveness, and materials that move energy rather than storing it. The body lowers its core temperature to enter and stay in deep sleep, and if the mattress traps heat, the body wakes to protect itself. You may not remember waking, but you feel it in the morning as fatigue and heaviness. Real cooling comes from coil systems that create open space for air circulation, open-cell foam structures that allow airflow, precision-cut ventilation channels, and natural cotton covers that release rather than trap heat.
Topics: cooling, technology