PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Flexible opals

2013-05-29
(Press-News.org) Instead of through pigments, these 'polymer opals' get their colour from their internal structure alone, resulting in pure colour which does not run or fade. The materials could be used to replace the toxic dyes used in the textile industry, or as a security application, making banknotes harder to forge. Additionally, the thin, flexible material changes colour when force is exerted on it, which could have potential use in sensing applications by indicating the amount of strain placed on the material. The most intense colours in nature - such as those in butterfly wings, peacock feathers and opals – result from structural colour. While most of nature gets its colour through pigments, items displaying structural colour reflect light very strongly at certain wavelengths, resulting in colours which do not fade over time. In collaboration with the DKI (now Fraunhofer Institute for Structural Durability and System Reliability) in Germany, researchers from the University of Cambridge have developed a synthetic material which has the same intensity of colour as a hard opal, but in a thin, flexible film. Naturally-occurring opals are formed of silica spheres suspended in water. As the water evaporates, the spheres settle into layers, resulting in a hard, shiny stone. The polymer opals are formed using a similar principle, but instead of silica, they are constructed of spherical nanoparticles bonded to a rubber-like outer shell. When the nanoparticles are bent around a curve, they are pushed into the correct position to make structural colour possible. The shell material forms an elastic matrix and the hard spheres become ordered into a durable, impact-resistant photonic crystal. "Unlike natural opals, which appear multi-coloured as a result of silica spheres not settling in identical layers, the polymer opals consist of one preferred layer structure and so have a uniform colour," said Professor Jeremy Baumberg of the Nanophotonics Group at the University's Cavendish Laboratory, who is leading the development of the material. Like natural opals, the internal structure of polymer opals causes diffraction of light, resulting in strong structural colour. The exact colour of the material is determined by the size of the spheres. And since the material has a rubbery consistency, when it is twisted and stretched, the spacing between spheres changes, changing the colour of the material. When stretched, the material shifts into the blue range of the spectrum, and when compressed, the colour shifts towards red. When released, the material will return to its original colour. The material could be used in security printing in order to detect fraud. Polymer opals can produce much brighter colour at lower cost than the holograms normally seen on banknotes, and would be more difficult to forge. The technology could also have important uses in the textile industry. "The World Bank estimates that between 17 and 20 per cent of industrial waste water comes from the textile industry, which uses highly toxic chemicals to produce colour," said Professor Baumberg. "So exploring other avenues to make colour is something worth exploring." The polymer opals can be bonded to a polyurethane layer and then onto any fabric. The material can be cut, laminated, welded, stitched, etched, embossed and perforated. The researchers have recently developed a new method of constructing the material, which offers localised control and potentially different colours in the same material by creating the structure only over defined areas. In the new work, electric fields in a print head are used to line the nanoparticles up forming the opal, and are fixed in position with UV light. The researchers have shown that different colours can be printed from a single ink by changing this electric field strength to change the lattice spacing. ### The results were published earlier this month in the journal Advanced Engineering Materials. Cambridge Enterprise, the University's commercialisation arm, is currently looking for a manufacturing partner to further develop the technology and take polymer opal films to market.


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

New research finds hernia surgery offers value for money

2013-05-29
New research suggesting that elective hernia surgery offers value-for-money and improved quality of life for patients has been published by the Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine. The new analysis is based on patients' own assessments of their health-related quality of life together with costs reported by hospitals. The research also indicates that keyhole surgery may offer more health benefit and value for money than open surgery for hernia operations. Recently it has been suggested that the NHS could save money by reducing access to hernia repair surgery. An inguinal ...

Results of the 'Global Research Council' in Berlin announced

2013-05-29
This news release is available in German. On 29 May 2013, the 2nd Annual Global Meeting of the Global Research Council (GRC) in Berlin has ended. Over three days, the heads of about 70 science and research councils from around the world as well as high-ranking guests from science and research, science administration and research policy attended the meeting. The topics of discussion and endorsement were an Action Plan towards Open Access, a high-level Statement of Principles for Research Integrity as well as new statutes for the GRC. Hosted jointly by the German Research ...

NRL geochemistry survey at Chatham Rise reveals absence of modern day greenhouse gas emissions

2013-05-29
WASHINGTON--Geochemistry analysis conducted by the U.S. Naval Research Laboratory of fossil sediment injection structures off the New Zealand coast in February and March, reveal no presence of modern day expulsions of methane gas, a potential contributor to global 'greenhouse effect' warming. The main focus of this most recent expedition was to investigate the geological origin of seafloor anomalies discovered during a 2007 marine-life survey on the Chatham Rise. During the 2007 survey scientists discovered several large sea floor craters, or pockmarks, including a ...

Coupled particles cross energy wall

2013-05-29
For the first time, a new kind of so-called Klein tunnelling—representing the quantum equivalent of crossing an energy wall— has been presented in a model of two interacting particles. This work by Stefano Longhi and Giuseppe Della Valle from the Institute of Photonics and Nanotechnology in Milan, Italy, is about to be published in EPJ B. Klein tunnelling is a quantum phenomenon referring to the fact that a high-potential barrier can be transparent to a particle moving at a speed nearing that of light, referred to as relativistic. Most of the previous Klein tunnelling ...

Walking or bicycling to work influenced by others

2013-05-29
People who walk or bike to work are likely to influence their co-workers and partners to do the same, according to health researchers. "Social influences are important, specifically interpersonal influences, such as spouses and co-workers," said Melissa Bopp, assistant professor of kinesiology, Penn State. She emphasized that community and employers also significantly influence whether people choose to actively commute. More than 80 percent of American adults do not meet the guidelines for aerobic and muscle-strengthening activities, according to Healthy People 2020, ...

Nanomedicines' impact on patients under the microscope

2013-05-29
A pioneering imaging technique to track the effects of next-generation nanomedicines on patients has been harnessed by a University of Strathclyde academic. Professor Dr. M. N. V. Ravi Kumar and Dr. Dimitrios Lamprou, of the Strathclyde Institute of Pharmacy and Biomedical Sciences, believe an advanced form of atomic force microscopy, known as PeakForce QNM, could boost developments in the field of nanomedicines, the encapsulation of potent drugs in tiny particles measuring billionths of a meter in diameter. They described how this detailed imaging approach may also help ...

Want to move up at work? Be a true believer

2013-05-29
New research is tweaking an old adage about how to get ahead in a competitive workplace: It's not just who you know, but what you believe in. A recently published BYU business study finds that employees who are "true believers" in the mission of their organization are more likely to increase in status and influence than non-believers. "Many organizations today have a well-defined mission with enduring principles that matter, not only to employees, but to other stakeholders," said John Bingham, BYU professor of organizational leadership and strategy. "It's a shift from ...

A molecular chain reaction in Alzheimer's disease

2013-05-29
Researchers at Lund University in Sweden have identified the molecular mechanism behind the transformation of one of the components in Alzheimer's disease. They identified the crucial step leading to formations that kill brain cells. Alzheimer's disease is associated with memory a loss and personality changes. It is still not known what causes the onset of the disease, but once started it cannot be stopped. The accumulation of plaques in the brain is widely considered a hallmark of the disease. The key discovery identified the chemical reaction that causes the plaques ...

Childhood abuse linked with food addiction in adult women

2013-05-29
Women who experienced severe physical or sexual abuse during childhood are much more likely to have a food addiction as adults than women who did not experience such abuse, according to a new study published in the journal Obesity. The study's findings provide valuable new information regarding potential causes and treatments for food addiction and obesity. National surveys indicate that more than a third of American women experienced some form of physical or sexual abuse before they reached 18 years of age. Also, research shows that such childhood abuse has consequences ...

The value of randomized clinical trials in radiation oncology clinical practice

2013-05-29
CHAPEL HILL, N.C. - Cancer patients, physicians and insurers want to be sure that whatever therapy is recommended and provided to patients is based on evidence, preferably results from randomized clinical trials. But are there enough clinical trials data to provide this level of confidence? A University of North Carolina School of Medicine study says not necessarily. Radiation oncologists evaluated how often patients were seen in their clinic with medical decisions to be made that were not specifically addressed by randomized controlled trials. They determined that ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Smart amplifier enabler for more qubits in future quantum computers

Following the tracks of an extremely adaptive bacterium

New ‘designer drugs’ pose growing threat to road safety in the US

Tackling depressive symptoms in high school students by honing emotional and social skills

One in five US foods and drinks contain synthetic dyes, study shows

One in five packaged foods and drinks sold in the United States contains synthetic dyes, study shows

Large global study links severe bleeding after childbirth to increased risk of cardiovascular disease

Breaking the silence about men breaking bones

More sex, less pain and irritation for perimenopausal and postmenopausal women

New review highlights histone and non-histone lysine lactylation: From molecular mechanisms to therapeutic frontiers

Boson sampling finds first practical applications in quantum AI

Add a twist to π-molecules! A new design strategy for organic semiconductor materials

Bushfire evacuation simulator wins prestigious US prize

Desert lichen offers new evidence for the possibility of life on other planets

Researchers reveal how brain amplifies perception of pain from multiple sources

The first “SpongeBooster of the Year” award celebrates efforts in wetland restoration

AI innovation at UBC Okanagan helps shipping ports see what’s coming—literally

Autoimmune disease linked to doubling in depression, anxiety, bipolar risks

Emotional demands and confrontation in person-contact roles linked to heightened type 2 diabetes risk

UK annual cost of dog walkers’ hand/wrist injuries estimated to top £23 million

The Lancet: Life-saving childhood vaccination coverage has stalled in recent decades, leaving millions of children at risk for deadly diseases

MD Anderson achieves sixth Magnet designation in recognition of nursing excellence

A unified theory of the mind

UTA powers smarter microgrids with new converter tech

US$53,000 essay competition asks: "How Quantum is Life?"

New combination therapy for rheumatoid arthritis: Targeting M6A methylation pathways

Editorial for the special issue on carbon capture, utilization, and storage

'A more versatile and powerful foundation for future photonic technologies'

World’s soft coral diversity retains signature of an ancient, vanished sea

Scientists use gene editing to correct harmful mitochondrial mutations in human cells

[Press-News.org] Flexible opals