14th International Conference on Textile Composites

Online & Onsite TexComp 14

60th Anniversary Hall on the Campus of the Kyoto Institute of Technology

14-16 September 2022


Co-Organized by
The Textile Machinery Society of Japan
Kyoto Institute of Technology

The Conference book & Abstracts are now available. (updated 14 Sep 2022)

The program is now available. (updated 9 Sep 2022)

The Early Registration deadline is postponed until September 2, 2022. (update 26 Aug 2022)

Registration will open on June 29. (update 28 June 2022)

We have decided the following: (update 30 May. 2022)

This conference has two modalities of participation: Physical-onsite or Virtual-online.
We have decided to discontinue publishing the full papers. Instead, Conference Abstracts will be published.
Abstract submission deadline postponed until 1 July 2022.
Call for Abstract
Because of the global situations with Covid-19, the organizing committee is aware of cases where travel is restricted/prohibited by either your departure country or by Japan's entry immigration policy. Therefore, We suggest you register as soon as possible after the site opens.
For information on entry into Japan and quarantine measures taken by the Japanese government, please visit the Ministry of Foreign Affairs website.

Visit the Ministry of Foreign Affairs website

Important Dates (update 26 Aug. 2022)

Abstract Submission Open : 11 October 2021
Deadline for Abstract submission : 15 January 2022 1 June 2022 1 July 2022
Notification of Acceptance : 28 February 2022 15 April 2022 15 July 2022
Paper Submission Open : 1 April 2022 1 July 2022
Deadline for Full Paper Submission : 1 May 2022 1 August 2022
Registration Open : 1 July 2022
Deadline for Early Registration : 10 Aug 2022 2 Sep 2022


Venue & Locations

Venue

60th Anniversary Hall, KIT

The TexComp14 will be held at the 60th Anniversary Hall on the Matsugasaki Campus of the KIT(Kyoto Institute of Technology), Japan.
The unique characteristic of KIT, the exploration of “Wisdom, Beauty and Technology,” has evolved over our 110 year history dating from the establishment of our predecessor institutions, Kyoto College of Technology and Kyoto College of Textile Fibers.

ACCESS


Location

Kyoto served as Japan's capital and the emperor's residence from 794 until 1868. It is one of the country's ten largest cities with a population of 1.5 million people and a modern face.
Over the centuries, Kyoto was destroyed by many wars and fires, but due to its exceptional historic value, the city was dropped from the list of target cities for the atomic bomb and escaped destruction during World War II. Countless temples, shrines and other historically priceless structures survive in the city today.

Kyoto Travel Guide japan-guide.com