
Researchers have devised a new method for stacking microscopic marbles into regular layers, producing intriguing materials which scatter light into intense colours, and which change colour when twisted or stretched.
Researchers have devised a new method for stacking microscopic marbles into regular layers, producing intriguing materials which scatter light into intense colours, and which change colour when twisted or stretched.
Finding a way to coax objects a billionth of a metre across into perfect formation over kilometre scales is a miracle.
Jeremy Baumberg
探花直播team, led by the 探花直播 of Cambridge, have invented a way to make such sheets on industrial scales, opening up applications ranging from smart clothing for people or buildings, to banknote security.
Using a new method called Bend-Induced-Oscillatory-Shearing (BIOS), the researchers are now able to produce hundreds of metres of these materials, known as 鈥榩olymer opals鈥, on a roll-to-roll process. 探花直播 are reported in the journal Nature Communications.
Some of the brightest colours in nature can be found in opal gemstones, butterfly wings and beetles. These materials get their colour not from dyes or pigments, but from the systematically-ordered microstructures they contain.
探花直播team behind the current research, based at Cambridge鈥檚 Cavendish Laboratory, have been working on methods of artificially recreating this 鈥榮tructural colour鈥 for several years, but to date, it has been difficult to make these materials using techniques that are cheap enough to allow their widespread use.
In order to make the polymer opals, the team starts by growing vats of transparent plastic nano-spheres. Each tiny sphere is solid in the middle but sticky on the outside. 探花直播spheres are then dried out into a congealed mass. By bending sheets containing a sandwich of these spheres around successive rollers the balls are magically forced into perfectly arranged stacks, by which stage they have intense colour.
By changing the sizes of the starting nano-spheres, different colours (or wavelengths) of light are reflected. And since the material has a rubber-like consistency, when it is twisted and stretched, the spacing between the spheres changes, causing the material to change colour. When stretched, the material shifts into the blue range of the spectrum, and when compressed, the colour shifts towards red. When released, the material returns to its original colour. Such chameleon materials could find their way into colour-changing wallpapers, or building coatings that reflect away infrared thermal radiation.
鈥淔inding a way to coax objects a billionth of a metre across into perfect formation over kilometre scales is a miracle,鈥 said Professor Jeremy Baumberg, the paper鈥檚 senior author. 鈥淏ut spheres are only the first step, as it should be applicable to more complex architectures on tiny scales.鈥
In order to make polymer opals in large quantities, the team first needed to understand their internal structure so that it could be replicated. Using a variety of techniques, including electron microscopy, x-ray scattering, rheology and optical spectroscopy, the researchers were able to see the three-dimensional position of the spheres within the material, measure how the spheres slide past each other, and how the colours change.
鈥淚t鈥檚 wonderful to finally understand the secrets of these attractive films,鈥 said PhD student Qibin Zhao, the paper鈥檚 lead author.
Cambridge Enterprise, the 探花直播鈥檚 commercialisation arm which is helping to commercialise the material, has been contacted by more than 100 companies interested in using polymer opals, and a new spin-out Phomera Technologies has been founded. Phomera will look at ways of scaling up production of polymer opals, as well as selling the material to potential buyers. Possible applications the company is considering include coatings for buildings to reflect heat, smart clothing and footwear, or for banknote security and packaging applications.
探花直播research is funded as part of a UK Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC) investment in the Cambridge , as well as the European Research Council (ERC).
Reference:
Q. Zhao et al. 鈥溾, Nature Communications (2016); DOI: 10.1038/ncomms11661
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