Revealing Invisible Photonic Inscriptions: Images from Strain

Abstract

Photonic structural materials have received intensive interest and have been strongly developed over the past few years for image displays, sensing, and anticounterfeit materials. Their smartness arises from their color responsivity to changes of environment, strain, or external fields. Here, we introduce a novel invisible photonic system that reveals encrypted images or characters by simply stretching, or immersing in solvents. This type of intriguing photonic material is composed of regularly arranged core-shell particles that are selectively cross-linked by UV irradiation, giving different strain response compared to un-cross-linked regions. The images reversibly appear and disappear when cycling the strain and releasing it. The unique advantages of this soft polymer opal system compared with other types of photonic gels are that it can be produced in roll to roll quantities, can be vigorously deformed to achieve strong color changes, and has no solvent evaporation issues because it is a photonic rubber system. We demonstrate potential applications together with a fabrication procedure which is straightforward and scalable, vital for user take-up. Our work deepens understanding of this rubbery photonic system based on core-shell nanospheres.

Publication
ACS Appl Mater Interfaces 2015, 7 (24), 13497–13502
Qibin Zhao
Qibin Zhao
Associate Professor

My research focuses on soft functional materials in which mesoscale structure controls optical and physical properties. I have worked extensively on colloidal and particle-assembled photonic materials, developing scalable processing methods to organize soft particulate systems into structurally coloured films and coatings. A central theme of my work is how external mechanical fields, such as shear, bending, stretching, and cyclic deformation, can drive microstructural ordering, lattice transitions, and structure-dependent optical responses. More broadly, I am interested in programmable soft photonic materials and functional coatings, where colloidal assembly, deformation processing, and soft-matter physics can be used to create adaptive optical, thermal, sensing, or mechanically encoded material functions.