Magnetically Controlled Beads Create New Display Applications

Environmentally friendly ink materials for color printing, as well as rewritable and reusable signage, posters, papers, and labels are all potential applications for a new material developed by a research team led by a chemist at the University of California, Riverside. The group has fabricated microscopic polymer beads that change color instantly and reversibly when external magnetic fields acting upon the microspheres change orientation.

According to UC Riverside, the beads—technically referred to as magnetochromatic microspheres—have excellent structural stability and are highly compatible with water, alcohol, hexane, and polymer solutions, allowing them to retain magnetically tunable colors in a variety of chemical environments.

“Unlike many conventional approaches, the instantaneous color change occurs with no change in the structure or intrinsic properties of the microspheres themselves,” explains Yadong Yin, an assistant professor of chemistry, who led the study that brought together chemists at UC Riverside and engineers at Seoul National University, South Korea. “What changes instead are the magnetic fields acting externally on the orientation of these microspheres, these photonic crystals. Our work provides a new mechanism for inducing color change in materials. Now, for the first time, stable photonic materials with tunable colors can be fabricated on a large scale.”

Seoul National University’s Sunghoon Kwon, a specialist in biophotonics and nanoengineering, whose lab collaborated with Yin's lab on the research, says the new technology has great potential for a wide range of photonic applications because the on/off switching of the diffraction color by the rotating photonic sphere is fast, which greatly simplifies the pixel structures. Therefore, he notes, the new technology is suitable for oversized displays, such as active, rewritable signage.

Lab experiments involved researchers embedding arrays of spatially ordered magnetic iron oxide nanostructures within each polymer microsphere, enabling its colors to be switched on and off by changing the microsphere's orientation – or more precisely the orientation of the array. Furthermore, the new system has the advantage of producing bistable color states, required for making rewritable displays.

 

Screen Printing

Recent Posts

Atlantis Headwear Goes Solar for Sustainable Future

Photovoltaic system was installed in late 2023.

1 week ago

Comfort Colors Announces New Proprietary Dyeing Process Called “Pigment Pure”

Process consumes less energy and uses, on average, three times less water than other traditional…

1 week ago

10 Production Scheduling Secrets That Will Have Your Team Ready to Rock

When it comes to scheduling, if you’re not early, you’re running late. 

1 week ago

Arcus Printers Barracuda Conveyor Flatbed Cutter

The machine caters to a wide range of materials.

1 week ago

The Profit Impact of a Market Dominating Position

Learn the challenges, risks and rewards of building a market identity that resonates with customers.

2 weeks ago

Inkcups Announces New CEO and Leadership Restructure

Rick Hajec becomes CEO, with new roles for Benjamin Adner and Jim Burns.

3 weeks ago

This website uses cookies.