Design, fabrication, and application of bioinspired soft photonic materials

When one thinks of color, the first thing which comes to mind is often absorption by pigments and dyes or emission by lights and displays. However, there is another mechanism known as structural color, most commonly seen in the swirling colors of a soap bubble. This is a wave phenomenon, where incid...

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Main Author: Miller, Benjamin
Other Authors: Kolle, Mathias
Format: Thesis
Published: Massachusetts Institute of Technology 2024
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/153674
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author Miller, Benjamin
author2 Kolle, Mathias
author_facet Kolle, Mathias
Miller, Benjamin
author_sort Miller, Benjamin
collection MIT
description When one thinks of color, the first thing which comes to mind is often absorption by pigments and dyes or emission by lights and displays. However, there is another mechanism known as structural color, most commonly seen in the swirling colors of a soap bubble. This is a wave phenomenon, where incident and reflected light interfere with each other to selectively reflect certain wave-lengths. More complex examples can often be seen in nature, such as the bright coloration of the blue morpho butterfly caused by intricate nanostructures on the wing. Developing synthetic versions of the structurally-colored materials found in nature has been a longstanding goal of the research community, with many notable successes and potential applications. One particularly interesting area is mechanically-responsive structural color, where the optical properties of the material change when strained. Yet current examples of these materials suffer from a number of drawbacks such as poor optical or mechanical performance, limited colors or patterns, high cost, and slow or low-volume production. The core of this thesis is the development of a new manufacturing process capable of producing sheets of mechanically-responsive, structurally-colored materials in a tunable, scalable, and affordable way. These are elastic materials which reversibly and predictably change color when stretched or compressed, achieved by combining 19th century research on color photography with recent research on holography. An assortment of sample materials created with this process are thoroughly analyzed. The thesis then extends this concept, suggesting a wide variety of alternative functional structurally-colored materials that might be created by modifying the manufacturing process in key ways. This is demonstrated by the creation of mechanically-responsive, structurally-colored fibers. With such a rich design space now accessible, exploring it experimentally becomes challenging. Therefore this thesis also presents a software platform that was developed, allowing the user to create a three-dimensional model of any desired object coated with any photonic structure. The user can then deform the object in real-time and observe the change in visual appearance. Finally, a number of applications for dynamic structurally-colored materials are demonstrated or discussed, making use of their ability to convert invisible physical forces into visible color change. This spans fields including healthcare, fashion, robotics, and human-computer interaction.
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spelling mit-1721.1/1536742024-03-14T03:42:41Z Design, fabrication, and application of bioinspired soft photonic materials Miller, Benjamin Kolle, Mathias Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Mechanical Engineering When one thinks of color, the first thing which comes to mind is often absorption by pigments and dyes or emission by lights and displays. However, there is another mechanism known as structural color, most commonly seen in the swirling colors of a soap bubble. This is a wave phenomenon, where incident and reflected light interfere with each other to selectively reflect certain wave-lengths. More complex examples can often be seen in nature, such as the bright coloration of the blue morpho butterfly caused by intricate nanostructures on the wing. Developing synthetic versions of the structurally-colored materials found in nature has been a longstanding goal of the research community, with many notable successes and potential applications. One particularly interesting area is mechanically-responsive structural color, where the optical properties of the material change when strained. Yet current examples of these materials suffer from a number of drawbacks such as poor optical or mechanical performance, limited colors or patterns, high cost, and slow or low-volume production. The core of this thesis is the development of a new manufacturing process capable of producing sheets of mechanically-responsive, structurally-colored materials in a tunable, scalable, and affordable way. These are elastic materials which reversibly and predictably change color when stretched or compressed, achieved by combining 19th century research on color photography with recent research on holography. An assortment of sample materials created with this process are thoroughly analyzed. The thesis then extends this concept, suggesting a wide variety of alternative functional structurally-colored materials that might be created by modifying the manufacturing process in key ways. This is demonstrated by the creation of mechanically-responsive, structurally-colored fibers. With such a rich design space now accessible, exploring it experimentally becomes challenging. Therefore this thesis also presents a software platform that was developed, allowing the user to create a three-dimensional model of any desired object coated with any photonic structure. The user can then deform the object in real-time and observe the change in visual appearance. Finally, a number of applications for dynamic structurally-colored materials are demonstrated or discussed, making use of their ability to convert invisible physical forces into visible color change. This spans fields including healthcare, fashion, robotics, and human-computer interaction. Ph.D. 2024-03-13T13:25:37Z 2024-03-13T13:25:37Z 2024-02 2024-02-15T21:16:10.567Z Thesis https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/153674 Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International (CC BY-SA 4.0) Copyright retained by author(s) https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/ application/pdf Massachusetts Institute of Technology
spellingShingle Miller, Benjamin
Design, fabrication, and application of bioinspired soft photonic materials
title Design, fabrication, and application of bioinspired soft photonic materials
title_full Design, fabrication, and application of bioinspired soft photonic materials
title_fullStr Design, fabrication, and application of bioinspired soft photonic materials
title_full_unstemmed Design, fabrication, and application of bioinspired soft photonic materials
title_short Design, fabrication, and application of bioinspired soft photonic materials
title_sort design fabrication and application of bioinspired soft photonic materials
url https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/153674
work_keys_str_mv AT millerbenjamin designfabricationandapplicationofbioinspiredsoftphotonicmaterials