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Sort of.. There are electric cooling blankets used in the health and rehabilitation industries. The closest consumer item would be BedJet. It's basically a blanket with an attached climate unit that creates heat or cold that is blown into the blanket's layers. Heat is easy and cheap to produce through resistance (main method in electric blankets or heating pads) but cooling requires an expensive not so quiet mechanical operation in a box. This is why it's mostly limited to use where noise and space isn't an issue.
Instead of trapping body heat and creating uncomfortable sleeping conditions like a regular blanket, a cooling blanket allows the heat to pass through its breathable fibers and dissipate. It also wicks up excess moisture, which contributes to cooling because moisture traps heat
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