Ads everywhere: ViVid screens window displays

dustindriver | Categroies: Engineering | Tags: , , , | Thursday, March 12th, 2009

The lonely dark windows of shuttered shops could soon glow with the frenetic energy of advertising, thanks to new ViVid projection screens. LinkEarth Corp has developed a flexible, cuttable window film full of LCD crystals that turns opaque when a current is applied. Project some video on the film and voila, your dormant storefront comes alive to advertise the latest neuro-implant upgrade or holographic porn.

To achieve this miraculous feat, LinkEarth Corp houses the LCD layer in a spongy polymer acrylic. The acrylic-laced layer can be bent, folded, punctured, or chopped into odd shapes without losing its ability to go opaque. The film is going on sale soon: Expect a 40-inch “screen” to cost about $1500. Projector sold separately, of course.

Link to Gizmodo article

Plastic combo conducts, trumps semiconductors

dustindriver | Categroies: Computing, Engineering, Gadgets, Physics | Tags: , , , , | Sunday, June 15th, 2008

Plastic typically insulates, protecting you from nervous-system-frying electrocution. But a team of Dutch researchers have discovered that if you mash two types of plastic together just right, they’ll conduct electricity as well as metal and exhibit properties that trump high-tech semiconductors.

Alberto Morpurgo and a team at the Delft University of Technology in the Netherlands squashed a micrometer of the organic polymer TTF to another micro-layer of a polymer called TCNQ. The two plastics stick together due to van der Waals forces—weak magnetic forces that act on molecules. Both polymers are insulators, but when they’re forced together electricity flows along the junction as well as it flows through metal.

Morpurgo believes that electrons are able to jump between spaces in the TCNQ molecules, allowing current to flow. It’s a new way to channel current and the researchers expect to discover many “interesting electronic properties” as they examine the material further.

The new polymer combo could replace semiconductors in circuitry. (Semiconductors are used to control the flow of electrons and are indispensable to modern electronics.) According to researchers, it’s much better at conducting electricity than current semiconductors.

Jochen Mannhart at the University of Augsburg in Germany told NewScientist:

“The electron concentration there is an order of magnitude higher,” he says. “That has the power to create new effects, from magnetism to superconductivity.”

Link to NewScientist article.

 

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