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Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: colleen morrison + 202-416-1437 cmorri@osa.org + 202-416-1437  Related to the article below (Last Update: 5/5/2008)

CLEO/QELS and PhAST Host Exclusive Press-Only Luncheon to Showcase ...
PR-Inside.com (Pressemitteilung), Austria - May 2, 2008
www.cleoconference.org - Optical Society Colleen Morrison, 202-416-1437 On-site 703-622-9159 cmorri@osa.org or WilkinsonShein Communications Keira Shein, ...
Source: Google News

Development of glucose intolerance in male transgenic mice overexpressing human glycogen synthase … -
… , CM Taylor, JW Yates, AD Morrison, AJ Harper, L … - Metabolism, 2004 - Elsevier
... a , Andrea Llano a , Gary B. Moore a , Gregory J. Murphy a , Stephen A. Smith a ,
Colleen M. Taylor a , John W. Yates a , Alastair D. Morrison a , Alexander J ...

Pilot Study on the Effect of Estrogen Replacement Therapy on Brain Dopamine Transporter Availability … -
SA Gardiner, MF Morrison, PD Mozley, LH Mozley, C … - ajgp, 2004 - Am Assoc Geria Psych
... Sara A. Gardiner, BA, Mary F. Morrison, MD, MS, P. David Mozley, MD, Lyn Harper
Mozley, Ph.D., Colleen Brensinger, MS, Warren Bilker, Ph.D., Andrew Newberg, MD ...

An evaluation of four programs for the management of aggression in psychiatric settings -
EF Morrison, C Carney Love - Archives of Psychiatric Nursing, 2003 - Elsevier
... Settings Eileen F. Morrison and Colleen Carney Love Regulatory agencies are encouraging
health care facilities to address the problem of violence to employees. ...

Williams syndrome: autosomal dominant inheritance -
CA Morris, IT Thomas, F Greenberg - Am J Med Genet, 1993 - doi.wiley.com
... of a familial oc- currence [Kurlander et al., 1966; Morrison and McNalley, 1967 ... Address
reprint request to Colleen A. Morris, MD, University of Nevada School of ...

The impact of amniotic fluid volume assessed intrapartum on perinatal outcome. -
C Baron, MA Morgan, TJ Garite - American Journal of Obstetrics & Gynecology, 1995 - pt.wkhealth.com
... Baron, Colleen MD; Morgan, Mark A. MD; Garite, Thomas J. MD. Orange, California. ...
REFERENCES TOP. 1. Chamberlain PF, Manning FA, Morrison I, Harman CR, Lange IR. ...

Two reciprocal translocations provide new clues to the high mutability of the Grid2 locus -
KO Robinson, AM Petersen, SN Morrison, CM Elso, L … - Mammalian Genome, 2005 - Springer
... mutability of the Grid2 locus Kellie O. Robinson, Angela M. Petersen,
Stephanie N. Morrison, Colleen M. Elso, Lisa Stubbs Genome ...

Membrane Sweeping versus Dinoprostone Vaginal Insert in the Management of Pregnancies beyond 41 … -
… , MF McNamara, JD Bass, CM Estes, JC Morrison - Journal of Perinatology, 1999 - nature.com
... Everett F Magann MD 2 , Suneet P Chauhan MD 3 , Michael F McNamara DO 1 , J David
Bass PhD 2 , Colleen M Estes RN 1 and John C Morrison MD 2. ...

Differential Effects of Gamma Interferon on Chlamydia trachomatis Growth in Polarized and … -
CD Kane, GI Byrne - Infection and Immunity, 1998 - pubmedcentral.nih.gov
... Colleen D. Kane and Gerald I. Byrne * Department of Medical Microbiology and Immunology ...
[PubMed]. 2. Beatty WL, Belanger TA, Desai AA, Morrison RP, Byrne G I ...

Intracellular Tryptophan Pool Sizes May Account for Differences in Gamma Interferon-Mediated … -
CD Kane, RM Vena, SP Ouellette, GI Byrne - Infection and Immunity, 1999 - pubmedcentral.nih.gov
... Colleen D. Kane, ? Renee M. Vena, Scot P. Ouellette, and Gerald I. Byrne * Department
of ... [PubMed]. 2. Beatty WL, Belanger TA, Desai AA, Morrison RP, Byrne G I ...

Comprehensive genetic analyses reveal evolutionary distinction of a mouse (Zapus hudsonius preblei) … -
TIML KING, JF SWITZER, CL MORRISON, MS EACKLES, CC … - Molecular Ecology, 2006 - Blackwell Synergy
... To cite this article: TIM L. KING, JOHN F. SWITZER, CHERYL L. MORRISON, MICHAEL
S. EACKLES, COLLEEN C. YOUNG, BARBARA A. LUBINSKI, PAUL CRYAN (2006 ...

Source: Google Scholar

Contact: Colleen Morrison
cmorri@osa.org
202-416-1437
Optical Society of America

Polymer opal films shed new kind of light on nature

New color-changing technology has potential packaging, military, aerospace applications

WASHINGTON, July 23--Imagine cleaning out your refrigerator and being able to tell at a glance whether perishable food items have spoiled, because the packaging has changed its color, or being able to tell if your dollar bill is counterfeit simply by stretching it to see if it changes hue. These are just two of the promising commercial applications for a new type of flexible plastic film developed by scientists at the University of Southampton in the United Kingdom and the Deutsches Kunststoff-Institut (DKI) in Darmstadt, Germany. Combining the best of natural and manmade optical effects, their films essentially represent a new way for objects to precisely change their color. The researchers will publish their findings in the July 23 issue of Optics Express, an open-access journal of the Optical Society of America.

These "polymer opal films" belong to a class of materials known as photonic crystals. Such crystals are built of many tiny repeating units, and are usually associated with a large contrast in the components’ optical properties, leading to a range of frequencies, called a "photonic bandgap," where no light can propagate in any direction. Instead, these new opal films have a small contrast in their optical properties. As with other artificial opal structures, they are also "self-assembling," in that the small constituent particles assemble themselves in a regular structure. But this self-assembly is not perfect, and though meant to be periodic, they have significant irregularities. In these materials, the interplay between the periodic order, the irregularities, and the scattering of small inclusions strongly affect the way the light travels through these films, just as in natural opal gem stones, a distant cousin of these materials. For example, light may be reflected in unexpected directions that depend on the light's wavelength.

Photonic crystals have been of interest for years for various practical applications, most notably in fiber optic telecommunications but also as a potential replacement for toxic and expensive dyes used for coloring objects, from clothes to buildings. Yet much of their commercial potential has yet to be realized because the colors in manmade films made from photonic crystals depend strongly on viewing angle. If you hold up a sheet of the opal film, Baumberg explains, “You’ll only see milky white, unless you look at a light reflected in it, in which case certain colors from the light source will be preferentially reflected.” In other words, change the angle, and the color changes.

These photonic crystals are apparent in the natural world as well but are more consistent in color at varying angles. Opals, butterfly wings, certain species of beetle, and peacock feathers all feature arrays of tiny holes, neatly arranged into patterns. Even though these natural structures aren’t nearly as precisely ordered as the manmade versions, the colors produced are unusually strong, and depend less on the viewing angle.

Until now, scientists believed that the same effect was at work in both manmade and natural photonic crystals: the lattice structure caused the light to reflect off the surface in such a way as to produce a color that changes depending upon the angle of reflection. Baumberg, however, suspects that the natural structures selectively scatter rather than reflect the light, a result of complex interplay between the order and the irregulaty in these structures.

Given that hunch, Baumberg’s team developed polymer opals to combine the precise structure of manmade photonic crystals with the robust color of natural structures. The polymer opal films are made of arrays of spheres stacked in three dimensions, rather than layers. They also contain tiny carbon nanoparticles wedged between the spheres, so light doesn’t just reflect at the interfaces between the plastic spheres and the surrounding materials, it also scatters off the nanoparticles embedded between the spheres. This makes the film intensely colored, even though they are made from only transparent and black components, which are environmentally benign. Additionally, the material can be "tuned" to only scatter certain frequencies of light simply by making the spheres larger or smaller.

In collaboration with scientists at DKI in Darmstadt, Germany, Baumberg and his colleagues have developed a solution for another factor that traditionally has limited the commercial potential of photonic crystals: the ability to mass-produce them. His Darmstadt colleagues have developed a manufacturing process that can be successfully applied to photonic crystals and they now can produce very long rolls of polymer opal films.

The films are "quite stretchy," according to Baumberg, and when they stretch, they change color, since the act of stretching changes the distance between the spheres that make up the lattice structure. This, too, makes them ideal for a wide range of applications, including potential ones in food packaging, counterfeit identification and even defense.

###

Paper: Otto L. J. Pursiainen, Jeremy J. Baumberg, Holger Winkler, Benjamin Viel, Peter Spahn, Tilmann Ruhl, "Nanoparticle-tuned Structural Color from Polymer Opals," Optics Express, Vol. 15, Issue 15, full text available http://www.opticsexpress.org/abstract.cfm?id=139950.

For more pictures see: www.nano.soton.ac.uk/opal.html

About Optics Express

Optics Express, the leading optics journal, reports on new developments in all fields of optical science and technology every two weeks. The journal provides rapid publication of original, peer-reviewed papers. It is published by the Optical Society of America and edited by Martijn de Sterke of the University of Sydney. Optics Express is an open-access journal and is available at no cost to readers online at www.OpticsExpress.org.

About OSA

Uniting more than 70,000 professionals from 134 countries, the Optical Society of America (OSA) brings together the global optics community through its programs and initiatives. Since 1916 OSA has worked to advance the common interests of the field, providing educational resources to the scientists, engineers and business leaders who work in the field by promoting the science of light and the advanced technologies made possible by optics and photonics. OSA publications, events, technical groups and programs foster optics knowledge and scientific collaboration among all those with an interest in optics and photonics. For more information, visit www.osa.org.
 
 
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