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Post Info TOPIC: Colour changing material


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A plant-like micro-organism mostly found in oceans could make the manufacture of products, from iridescent cosmetics, paints and fabrics to credit card holograms, cheaper and greener. The tiny single-celled diatom, which first evolved hundreds of millions of years ago, has a hard silica shell which is iridescent in other words, the shell displays vivid colours that change depending on the angle at which it is observed. This effect is caused by a complex network of tiny holes in the shell which interfere with light waves. UK scientists have now found an extremely effective way of growing diatoms in controlled laboratory conditions, with potential for scale-up to industrial level. This would enable diatom shells to be mass-produced, harvested and mixed into paints, cosmetics and clothing to create stunning colour-changing effects, or embedded into polymers to produce difficult-to-forge holograms. Manufacturing consumer products with these properties currently requires energy-intensive, high-temperature, high-pressure industrial processes that create tiny artificial reflectors. But farming diatom shells, which essentially harnesses a natural growth process, could provide an alternative that takes place at normal room temperature and pressure, dramatically reducing energy needs and so cutting carbon dioxide emissions. The process is also extremely rapid in the right conditions, one diatom can give rise to 100 million descendants in a month.

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University of Southampton creates new colour changing material
Scientists at the University of Southampton and the Deutsches Kunststoff-Institut (DKI) in Darmstadt, Germany have created a new type of plastic film that allows objects to change their colour.
The researchers, led by the Universitys Professor Jeremy Baumberg and Otto Pursiainen, developed an Opal polymer to mimic the gemstone's iridescent properties.
The new material can be used across a range of applications including eye-catching paint that shimmers, food packaging that changes colour if its contents spoil and banknotes that are hard to counterfeit.

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