Heat, mass transfer, and non-Newtonian fluid flow processes have gained significant interest in various industrial applications due to their substantial significance in the fields of technology, engineering, and science. The aforementioned processes hold significance in the context of polymer solutions, porous industrial materials, ceramic processing, oil recovery, and fluid beds. This study aims to investigate the impact of temperature-dependent viscosity and thermal conductivity on the cilia-driven flow of tangent hyperbolic fluid with mass and heat transfer. The objectives include analyzing how these variable properties affect the velocity, temperature, and concentration profiles within the fluid flow, thereby providing insights into potential applications in bioenergy systems and enhancing the understanding of non-Newtonian fluid dynamics. Viscous dissipation has been taken into consideration. Firstly, governing nonlinear coupled equations are solved in a fixed frame, and then the results are tracked in the wave frame. MATHEMATICA's NDSolve command is utilized to graphically discuss the findings for several different flow parameters. Analytically stated, solving a problem with such a coupled and nonlinear system is tough. The effect of new parameters is discussed on velocity and temperature profile and graphically shown. It has been observed that the thermal conductivity is improved at moderately low temperatures, whereas the opposite pattern is seen at comparatively high temperatures. On the other hand, the temperature distribution demonstrates a behaviour consistent with lowering as the number of heat Bolus increases. The findings that were provided offer beneficial insight into bioenergy systems and serve as a helpful benchmark for both experimental and extra-progressive computational Multiphysics models.