Remember those reports about ET
and his huge oval black eyes? I have
already posted that these were certainly artificial and designed to see through
a far wider portion of the spectrum than we presently do.
It would be quite plausible to
use a graphene surface and even use a fluid system to control the nature of the
lens itself in order to shift up and down the spectrum rather than receive all
the options at once. Many other things
likely evolve from all that.
In the event it appears that they
are also learning how to manipulate it and now perhaps we can find a problem to
solve.
Graphene bubbles could make better lenses
Sep 19, 2011 3 comments
A tiny bubble of graphene could be used to make an optical lens with an
adjustable focal length. That is the claim of physicists in the UK , who have
shown that the curvature of such bubbles can be controlled by applying an
external voltage. Devices based on the discovery could find use in adaptive-focus
systems that try to mimic how the human eye works.
Graphene is a sheet of carbon just one atom thick and has a host of
unique mechanical and electronic properties. It is extremely elastic and can be
stretched by up to 20%, which means that bubbles of various shapes can be
"blown" from the material. This, combined with the fact that graphene
is transparent to light yet impermeable to most liquids and gases, could make
the material ideal for creating adaptive-focus optical lenses.
Such lenses are employed in mobile-phone cameras, webcams and
auto-focusing eye glasses, and are usually made of transparent liquid crystals
or fluids. Although such devices work well, they are relatively difficult and
expensive to make. In principle, graphene-based adaptive optics could be
fabricated using much simpler methods than those used for existing devices.
They could also become cheaper to produce if industrial-scale processes to
manufacture graphene devices become available.
Tiny bubbles
Now Andre Geim and Konstantin Novoselov – who shared the 2010 Nobel
Prize for Physics for discovery of graphene – have built tiny devices that show
how graphene could be used in adaptive optical systems. Working with colleagues
at the University
of Manchester , the
physicists began by preparing large graphene flakes on flat silicon-oxide
substrates. When the air underneath the graphene cannot escape, a bubble of the
material naturally forms. The bubbles are extremely stable and range in size
from a few tens of nanometres to tens of micrometres in diameter.
To show that the bubbles could work as adaptive-focus lenses, the team
made devices that contained titanium/gold electrodes contacted to the bubbles
in a transistor-like arrangement. In this way, the researchers were able to
apply a gate voltage to the set-up. They then obtained optical-microscope
images of the structures while tuning the gate voltage from –35 to +35 V.
As expected, they saw the shape of the bubbles go from being highly curved to
more flat as the voltage changed.
Real, working lenses could be made by filling the graphene bubbles with
a high-refractive index liquid or by covering the bubbles with a flat layer of
this liquid, say the researchers.
So, what is next? "We have shown that controlling the curvature of
these bubbles is an easy task," says Novoselov. "We are now looking
at performing other experiments where more complicated deformations in graphene
would be created and controlled."
The results are published in Applied Physics
Letters 99 093103.
About the author
Belle Dumé is a contributing editor to nanotechweb.org
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