<span style="color: #222222;">Scientists have created the world's smallest pixels, by trapping particles of light under tiny rocks of gold, that could be used for new types of large-scale flexible displays, big enough to cover entire buildings.</span><br />” <br />” <span style="color: #222222;">The colour pixels, developed by scientists from the University of Cambridge in the UK, are compatible with roll-to-roll fabrication on flexible plastic films, dramatically reducing their production cost. </span><br />” <br />” <span style="color: #222222;">It has been a long-held dream to mimic the colour-changing skin of octopus or squid, allowing people or objects to disappear into the natural background.</span><br />” <br />” <span style="color: #222222;">However, making large-area flexible display screens is still prohibitively expensive because they are constructed from highly precise multiple layers.</span><br />” <br />” <span style="color: #222222;">According to the research developed in the journal Science Advances, at the centre of the pixels is a tiny particle of gold a few billionths of a metre across. </span><br />” <br />” <span style="color: #222222;">The grain sits on top of a reflective surface, trapping light in the gap in between. Surrounding each grain is a thin sticky coating which changes chemically when electrically switched, causing the pixel to change colour across the spectrum.</span><br />” <br />” <span style="color: #222222;">Cambridge University professor Jeremy J Baumberg, who led the research said that these are not the normal tools of nanotechnology, but this sort of radical approach is needed to make sustainable technologies feasible. </span><br />” <br />” <span style="color: #222222;">The pixels could enable a host of new application possibilities such as building-sized display screens, architecture which can switch off solar heat load, active camouflage clothing and coatings, as well as tiny indicators for coming internet-of-things devices. </span><br />” <br />” <span style="color: #222222;">The team of scientists, from different disciplines including physics, chemistry and manufacturing, made the pixels by coating vats of golden grains with an active polymer called polyaniline and then spraying them onto flexible mirror-coated plastic, to dramatically drive down production cost.</span><br />” <br />” <span style="color: #222222;">The pixels are the smallest yet created, a million times smaller than typical smartphone pixels. They can be seen in bright sunlight and because they do not need constant power to keep their set colour, have an energy performance that make large areas feasible and sustainable.</span><br />” <br />
News On AIR | May 13, 2019 1:02 PM | World's smallest pixels
World's smallest pixels may help create building-sized flexible displays