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Expanding the plasmonic painter's palette

Date:
March 4, 2020
Source:
American Chemical Society
Summary:
By blending paints in their palette, artists can create a broad spectrum of colors with subtly different hues. However, scientists who wish to create a similar range of structural colors, like those found on butterfly wings, are much more limited. Now, researchers have developed a new method for mixing plasmonic red, blue and green to yield a virtually unlimited number of colors that could be used for new types of displays. 
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By blending paints in their palette, artists can create a broad spectrum of colors with subtly different hues. However, scientists who wish to create a similar range of structural colors, like those found on butterfly wings, are much more limited. Now, researchers reporting in ACS Nano have developed a new method for mixing plasmonic red, blue and green to yield a virtually unlimited number of colors that could be used for new types of displays.

Unlike pigments, structural colors get their hues by reflecting light from microscopic textures. Scientists can create some of these colors by putting metal nanoparticles onto surfaces in various patterns. These "plasmonically induced" colors are less susceptible to fading than pigments, and they might be useful for new types of paint, electronic displays and anti-counterfeiting measures. But producing a gamut of structural colors with smooth transitions between hues and tones has been challenging. Therefore, Dimos Poulikakos, Hadi Eghlidi and colleagues wanted to develop a new plasmonic color-mixing approach that would allow countless color variations.

The researchers began with a palette of three primary colors (red, green and blue). They made pixels of each color by arranging silver nanorods in lattice patterns on glass surfaces. The lengths and widths of the nanorods, and the distances between nanorods in the horizontal direction, determined whether the pixel was red, green or blue. The researchers adjusted the brightness of each color by varying the vertical distance between nanorods in the lattice. When the team interwove three of the primary color lattices in a single pixel and varied the vertical distances to adjust brightness, they could generate 2,456 unique colors with a pixel size of 4.26 × 4.26 ?m. The researchers demonstrate the method to reproduce an image of two colorful parrots and a black-and-white photograph of Marie Curie.


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Journal Reference:

  1. Claudio U. Hail, Gabriel Schnoering, Mehdi Damak, Dimos Poulikakos, Hadi Eghlidi. A Plasmonic Painter’s Method of Color Mixing for a Continuous Red–Green–Blue Palette. ACS Nano, 2020; 14 (2): 1783 DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.9b07523

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American Chemical Society. "Expanding the plasmonic painter's palette." ScienceDaily. ScienceDaily, 4 March 2020. <www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2020/03/200304141501.htm>.
American Chemical Society. (2020, March 4). Expanding the plasmonic painter's palette. ScienceDaily. Retrieved November 20, 2024 from www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2020/03/200304141501.htm
American Chemical Society. "Expanding the plasmonic painter's palette." ScienceDaily. www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2020/03/200304141501.htm (accessed November 20, 2024).

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