Scalable optical manufacture of dynamic structural colour in stretchable materials.

Journal: Nature materials
Published Date:

Abstract

Structurally coloured materials that change their colour in response to mechanical stimuli are uniquely suited for optical sensing and visual communication. The main barrier to their widespread adoption is a lack of manufacturing techniques that offer spatial control of the materials' nanoscale structures across macroscale areas. Here, by adapting Lippmann photography, we report an approach for producing large-area, structurally coloured sheets with a rich and easily controlled design space of colour patterns, spectral properties, angular scattering characteristics and responses to mechanical stimuli. Relying on just a digital projector and commercially available photosensitive elastomers, our approach is fast, scalable, affordable and relevant for a wide range of manufacturing settings. We also demonstrate prototypes for mechanosensitive healthcare materials and colorimetric strain and stress sensing for human-computer interaction and robotics.

Authors

  • Benjamin Harvey Miller
    Department of Mechanical Engineering, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA, USA.
  • Helen Liu
    Department of Mechanical Engineering, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA, USA.
  • Mathias Kolle
    Department of Mechanical Engineering, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA, USA. mkolle@mit.edu.