Better Displays With New Nanowire Film 127
Roland Piquepaille writes "A Harvard University team has successfully applied a film of nanowires on glass and plastic. This might lead to better and flexible displays or wearable computers, says the American Chemical Society, in "Nanowire film brings cheaper, faster electronics a step closer." "By using a 'bottom-up' approach pioneered by our group, which involves assembly of pre-formed nanoscale building blocks into functional devices, we can apply a film of nanowires to glass or plastics long after growth, and do so at room temperature," says Charles M. Lieber, professor of chemistry at Harvard. The researchers think that the first applications will be improved smart cards or LCD displays. But they also have a vision for the next decade. "One could imagine, for instance, contact lenses with displays and miniature computers on them, so that you can experience a virtual tour of a new city as you walk around." This overview contains more details and references. It also includes a picture of a high-density crossbar nanostructure, whose geometry can serve as the basis for many applications, like bio-sensor arrays or high-density data storage."
On contacts? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:On contacts? (Score:2, Funny)
Re:On contacts? (Score:1)
How long until the millitary gets a hold of this for contacts... Night vision contacts... zoom contacts....
Will they be able to create images like a HUD? Process info from a recon bird, and display enemy locations on your contact lens, with distance, and position...
Will the be hijackable?
Ok strange trip down a detour
making capital instead of destroying it (Score:1)
Re:making capital instead of destroying it (Score:2)
Re:making capital instead of destroying it (Score:1)
Re:On contacts? (Score:2, Informative)
Re:On contacts? (Score:1)
Bring this on! I have a really wacked prescription (+4.00 left eye and -1.00 right eye) and lack the parallax error needed one form of depth perception. This technology was practally built exclusively for me.
Re:On contacts? (Score:1)
I call bullshit on this one.
Re:On contacts? (Score:2)
Blue Screen of Death (Score:2)
Re:On contacts? (Score:3, Funny)
Can you say repetitive eyeball stress syndrome?
(Although popups on pron sites already cause this, most don't complain due to embarrassment)
Re:On contacts? (Score:2)
Re:On contacts? (Score:2)
Note also that the lens does not have to have the whole computer in it, nor a power storage medium. It needs only to have enough of a computer to run the display, some sort of (hopefully secure) wireless networking, and an antenna to pick up power. Where you broadcast the power from is up to you but something with a relatively harmless frequency on your coll
Just one word (Score:4, Insightful)
Hype.
Anything with 'nano' or 'cyber' in the name is hype. Yeah, we will see smaller cheaper electronics, but that's hardly news.
Re:Just one word (Score:1)
But as for the term, I must agree. This certainly isn't "nanotechnology". Nano has become what (shudder) "mega" was in the 80's.
Re:Just one word (Score:2)
Re:Just one word (Score:2)
*shudder*, *gasp*
The importance of this work (Score:1)
The problem that the semiconductor industry is facing right now is the ever more-expensive optical lithography systems. As the device features shrink down, we are getting more and more to the point where wavelengths will approach the X-ray spectrum. This is a whole new world o
Re:Just one word (Score:1)
Xtreme cyber nano insert product here. sure to get lots of hype.
Useful (Score:5, Funny)
So while you are walking around in the city, you get to see what it looks like. Hmm... Pity you can't do that now.
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Useful (Score:2)
If they would promise me that they would give me all those nifty voyeur ads of what I *could* see with an X10, hell why not
Come on! Free soft pr0n when you're walking around the city is Not a Bad Thing (TM).
walk around (Score:3, Insightful)
Considering we are geeks, going to a new city doesn't involve walking around, more like visiting conventions and getting the latest cool funny-phrase-sysadmin-tshirts.
Take away the walking part mister, and you have yourself a deal.
Fault Tolerance? (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Fault Tolerance? (Score:2)
Re:Fault Tolerance? (Score:2)
Can I get these things on my glasses instead of contact lenses? I don't appreciate small wires poking me in the eye.
Contacts (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Contacts (Score:1, Insightful)
Re:Contacts (Score:1)
Just wait for the advertisements they're going to be beaming into your dreams.
Re:Contacts (Score:1)
I take it... (Score:1)
Re:I take it... (Score:1, Informative)
Neil Stephenson
Re:I take it... (Score:1)
Kick me. I deserve it. *Sigh*
my eyesight is bad enough as it is... (Score:2, Funny)
my eyesight is bad enough as it is, the last thing I need are electronics short-circuiting in my eyeball.
Re:my eyesight is bad enough as it is... (Score:1)
The Blue Sight Of Death!!!
Invisibility? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Invisibility? (Score:2)
How long before (Score:1, Funny)
Glasses for Zaphod Beebelbrox (Score:3, Funny)
That could be really cool when driving.
Re:Glasses for Zaphod Beebelbrox (Score:1)
Lovely! (Score:2)
Until the spamming starts! [slashdot.org]
=Smidge=
Contacts (Score:2)
Re:Contacts (Score:2)
Great idea (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Great idea (Score:1)
Movies (Score:2, Insightful)
Lag, motion sickness (Score:2)
With contacts, you would have to not only track head movement, but also eyeball movement and compensate it without perceptible lag.
One step closer to true VR... (Score:2)
Displays embedded in contact lenses would be orders of magnitude less clumsy than even lightweight VR helmets. At that scale they could probably be powered by eye motion (as some watches are powered by wrist motion), or you could embed miniature solar panels where the contact lense covers the iris, with the LCD just covering the pupil.
Re:One step closer to true VR... (Score:1)
eye zooming (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:eye zooming (Score:1, Interesting)
Re:eye zooming (Score:2)
Re:eye zooming (Score:2)
meanwhile, in Japan (Score:3, Interesting)
umm, gosh, don't know if i missed this news elsewhere in western media but last week on ABC (Asahi Broadcast Corp.) Japan there was a review of recent nanotechnology advances here in Japan and they reported that:
1) A Yamagata University research team has managed to make flexible millimeter thick screens (roll up your TV and stick it in a tube, into your backback, pocket, whatever and away you go..!) ALREADY so I don't understand what the big deal is with these nanowires. Plus the Yamagata people figured out how to use a kind of "nano-dye" for multiple applications like:
a) flexible thin solar cells (your tent is a battery charger!) or
b) a blue "lens" to increase the data storage on those recently reknown expensive blue laser cd's that store gigs of date. (20 times more (?))
Sorry for the lack of net based info but it looked pretty amazing - heck, I saw it on TV so come on,
it must be bran' spankin' new!
- Jeff -
Re:meanwhile, in Japan (Score:2)
The awfull truth of the matter is that there is NO nanotechnology in use or realistically close to use right now outside of catalysts and better paints.
It is very popular now (especially in Japan... where this all started) to claim anything cool is nanotechnology. These wire meshes we're talking about here are many orders of magnitude smaller than your millermeter screen. It would be like saying we don't need skyscrapers, we already have two story house
When you see "wearable computers," you got hype (Score:2)
Fiction (Score:3, Informative)
Someone did imagine this sort of technology. I particularly like "Fast Times at Fairmont High" by Vernor Vinge for it's description of wearable computers/contacts use for visual 'enhancement'.
A.
Re:Fiction (Score:2)
Chevette Washington is a bicycle messenger turned pick-pocket who impulsively snatches a pair of innocent-looking sunglasses. But these are no ordinary shades. What you can see through these high-tech specs can make you rich--or get you killed.
For those who haven't read it, the shades show
Combine it with this technology.... (Score:3, Interesting)
Be able to manipulate the interface in your eye with only your mind.
Optoelectronics in general (Score:5, Informative)
For LEDs, some light that might escape the device is reflected or absorbed by the tiny wires carrying the current into the junction. Thinner wires would mean an improvement (though perhaps small at this point) in the amount of light you get out of the device.
With light going in the other direction, photovoltaics (solar panels) and various detectors are all about getting as much light into a junction as possible, so thinner wires would help make better devices here too.
Fantastic (Score:2)
This sounds like a fantastic new technology. Being able to shrink high resolution to a usable size for photo-realistic displays would be great. But I think the idea of contact-lense screens or glasses with inbuilt displays particularly exciting as it could/would revolutionise computers.
Wearable computers are a much discussed idea but I feel that without a feedback display there are pretty useless. Now we have the possibility of it getting much closer...\
sun-contacts (Score:2)
What about Light Emitting Polymers (LEP)? (Score:2)
Re:What about Light Emitting Polymers (LEP)? (Score:2)
Peril Sensitive Contacts? (Score:1)
"honestly officer, my contacts turned totally black when I hit I-285. I couldn't see a thing, but I could still talk on my cell phone so I did."
We ran a related story... (Score:1)
Screw contact lenses (Score:2)
What it would be a better use for ... (Score:3, Insightful)
Forget contacts the zoom, forget contacts that shoot freakin' laser beams. How about contacts that make my vision 20/20? My corrected vision is 20/35 and my contacts can only be worn for 7-8 hours a day then I have to wear coke bottle glasses because there isn't anything better.
My brother-in-law has Retinitis-Pigmentosa [retinitis-pigmentosa.com] which is a degenerative disease of the retina. He was diagnosed 7 years ago and is down to 10% of his vision which is stricly peripheral. Imagine a spoon in front of your eye and you can only see off to the sides.
A better use of this technology would be contacts that can adjust his line of sight to the best position on his eye.
Or to assist the vision of the elderly who often times can be helped with glasses or contacts.
Instead of coming up with "new" "cool" ways to use this, why don't we use the technology to help the people that need it? The people that surround us everyday?
Re:What it would be a better use for ... (Score:1)
Re:What it would be a better use for ... (Score:2)
I don't mean to sound cold-hearted, but I have no doubt that the devices you want WILL be developed. Its just not going to be developed first.
Sorry, suck it up. Thats the way the world works. This has much more potential aside from just correcting someone's vision. To whine about the fact that that isn't the first application for it is like wh
Shigawire (Score:2)
Where are your training lenses? (Score:2)
Total Recall (Score:2)
Not that I like eliminating access to nature, just saying that would probably sell... Replace your window that looks at the neighboring building and alley with a nano-wire device that can display mountains, skyline, sunset,
This is not anything new (Score:1, Informative)
http://neasia.nikkeibp.com/wcs/leaf?CID=onair/asa
www.contactwasher.com (Score:3, Funny)
"Yes, is this tech support? I think I have a virus in my contact. Everywhere I go, everyone's face is being replaced by banner ads.... Yes, I see it. Yea, it says gator. What I'm screwed?......"
This has been done to death already (Score:3, Interesting)
This may be difficult for some of you to believe, but the standard technique is to use scotch tape. It's quite amazing, but you can pick up an array of wires on scotch tape (a similar array to that in the article). Then you simpliy place the tape wherever you want your wires and dissolve it away.
Of course you're still left with the same problem as on the substrate which is that no one understands how or why these arrays do whatever they may do (which is generally NOT reproducible). Everyone has been shouting molecular electronics for so long that they havn't stopped to actually check that it IS molecular electronics. A timely article in Science last month basicaly served as a retraction for the last 5 years of research in this field.
It's fine for them to report that they found a new way to move nanowires onto glass or plastic, but the days of saying these types of networks are only a few years away from market are over.
Virtual tours? (Score:2)
This is kinda cool... (Score:2)
Re:This is kinda cool... (Score:1)
Unless that's in a envelope, sealed and mailed to your laywer, forget about your prior art claim once they patent this. Kicking around in my files does not qualify.
Re:This is kinda cool... (Score:2)
what for? (Score:1)
Nanowire technology wishlist (Score:1)
Nano acrobatics!
X-Ray contact lenses!!
Re: (Score:1)
Other Great Possibilities (Score:1)
Great, contact lenses (Score:1)
Okay, can it give me a full red color flood with various data graphs and numbers floating around and a cursor? I want to experience walking around with Terminator eyes for a few days.
The picture is wrong (Score:1)
It is a picture from the Heath group at Caltech, and the wires are made in a so-called SNAP process. Read about it in the Science article (PDF) [caltech.edu]
Re:Until... (Score:2)