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Displays Science Technology

How To Make Electronic Displays With Mood Ring Ink 33

Soychemist writes "Print some thermochromic ink onto a sheet of paper, put metal heating elements on the other side, and you have a rudimentary color-changing display. Chemists in the Whitesides Group at Harvard think that the devices could be used to provide a simple readout from cheap medical tests and kits that check water for pollutants. In the past year, the same scientists have made a three-cent medical test and improvised a centrifuge with an egg beater. Their aim is to invent useful gizmos with everyday materials."
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How To Make Electronic Displays With Mood Ring Ink

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  • Re:Resistive ink (Score:2, Informative)

    by Anonymous Coward on Saturday August 01, 2009 @03:56PM (#28911303)

    I don't know if it's been done before, but SMT resistors will work quite well. Just make sure they're rated at the temperature the thermochromic ink needs to get to... if not, you could just solder some nichrome wire across the pads. You might want to consider heat sinking things so that it will be able to cool off quickly as well... a bit of a balancing act, that.

    Good luck making it cool in time to wear while the man burns!

  • Re:Resistive ink (Score:3, Informative)

    by Rorschach1 ( 174480 ) on Saturday August 01, 2009 @06:56PM (#28912521) Homepage

    Most of the films are rated for temperatures close to room temperature, though you can get other ranges. I've used through-hole resistors as heating elements before and they do indeed work quite well. A 1-watt metal film resistor will generate enough heat at 3 watts to melt its own solder joints. Long before that happens, it gets hot enough to melt through nylon or spectra, which is what I was using it for - a thermal knife for a load release.

    It's certainly not going to be done in time this year, but maybe next. What actually inspired me was upgrading my desktop CNC milling machine's spindle motor so that it can handle cutting brass easily. I cut a few test shapes and I love it - it machines easily and looks beautiful.

    I'm not really into steampunk, but I love some of the design elements. I'm working on a costume for next year that's sort of golden age of science fiction inspired, somewhere between Battlestar Galactica and a WWII German officer's uniform. I love the idea of a slightly bulky, machined brass wristwatch on a big leather band that's obviously electronic but clearly not a display technology in common real-world use, and I think it'll go well with the outfit.

  • by wrmrxxx ( 696969 ) on Saturday August 01, 2009 @10:24PM (#28913605)
    The summary links to Wired, which in turn links to the real article with the interesting details: http://www.rsc.org/delivery/_ArticleLinking/DisplayHTMLArticleforfree.cfm?JournalCode=LC&Year=2009&ManuscriptID=b905832j&Iss=Advance_Article [rsc.org]

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