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Colour-changing artificial ''chameleon skin'' developed

LONDON: Cambridge researchers have developed artificial ''chameleon skin'' that changes colour when exposed to light and could be used in active camouflage and large-scale dynamic displays.

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London, August 22 

Cambridge researchers have developed artificial 'chameleon skin' that changes colour when exposed to light and could be used in active camouflage and large-scale dynamic displays.

The material is made of tiny particles of gold coated in a polymer shell, and then squeezed into microdroplets of water in oil.

When exposed to heat or light, the particles stick together, changing the colour of the material, according to the research published in the journal Advanced Optical Materials.

In nature, animals such as chameleons and cuttlefish are able to change colour thanks to chromatophores: skin cells with contractile fibres that move pigments around.

The pigments are spread out to show their colour, or squeezed together to make the cell clear.

The artificial chromatophores developed by researchers from the University of Cambridge in the UK are built on the same principle.

However, instead of contractile fibres, their colour-changing abilities rely on light-powered nano-mechanisms, and the 'cells' are microscopic drops of water.

When the material is heated above 32 degrees Celsius, the nanoparticles store large amounts of elastic energy in a fraction of a second, as the polymer coatings expel all the water and collapse.

This has the effect of forcing the nanoparticles to bind together into tight clusters.

When the material is cooled, the polymers take on water and expand, and the gold nanoparticles are strongly and quickly pushed apart, like a spring.

"Loading the nanoparticles into the microdroplets allows us to control the shape and size of the clusters, giving us dramatic colour changes," said Andrew Salmon from Cambridge.

The geometry of the nanoparticles when they bind into clusters determines which colour they appear as: when the nanoparticles are spread apart they are red and when they cluster together they are dark blue.

However, the droplets of water also compress the particle clusters, causing them to shadow each other and make the clustered state nearly transparent.

At the moment, the material is in a single layer, so is only able to change to a single colour, researchers said.

However, different nanoparticle materials and shapes could be used in extra layers to make a fully dynamic material, like real chameleon skin, they said.

The researchers also observed that the artificial cells can 'swim' in simple ways, similar to the algae Volvox.

Shining a light on one edge of the droplets causes the surface to peel towards the light, pushing it forward.

Under stronger illumination, high pressure bubbles briefly form to push the droplets along a surface. —PTI  

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