Futurity

Powder from scrap tires can bring color to displays

"This provides a simple means to turn an affordable and abundant material into something useful and beautiful."
color paint rollers

Physicists have discovered how to transform recovered carbon black powder to offer a wide range of colors for potential display applications.

Recovered carbon black powder is a common pigment produced from scrap rubber tires. There is a growing demand to use it as an environmentally friendly and sustainable material as a reinforcing filler in tires and many other applications.

Applying focused laser treatment to recovered carbon black powder through a photo-thermal process can make it display a wide range of colors, the researchers found.

black carbon blue butterfly
Figure shows a multicolor butterfly design which is made by patterning recovered carbon black in ambient and helium environments. (Credit: NUS)

Recovered carbon black powder often contains different types of metal impurities, a flaw that many deem undesirable. However, when researchers heated it in air or in a helium environment using a focused laser beam, the carbon atoms get infused into the metal contaminates. This process results in the creation of additional energy states in the hybrid materials system and thus allows electrons in the material to hop to different electronic states and emit different colors.

At the same time, the heated material changes in its physical form due to heat-induced melting and re-solidification of the agglomerated powder, resulting in the formation of periodic arrangements of carbon nanoparticles. The visible colors are also partly due to light scattering from these periodic arrangements.

The researchers also found that they are able to turn off, or dim, the fluorescence coming from the sample by applying an external electric potential. This, coupled with the ability to transfer the material onto flexible, transparent films, could potentially allow the “new” material that could be useful as a flexible and transparent multicolor fluorescence display.

“As the process is not limited by scale and is flexible, recovered carbon black powder could potentially be used for large-scale fluorescence displays,” says Sow Chorng Haur from the physics department at National University of Singapore.

“This provides a simple means to turn an affordable and abundant material into something useful and beautiful.”

The paper appears in Nano Research.

Source: National University of Singapore

The post Powder from scrap tires can bring color to displays appeared first on Futurity.

More from Futurity

Futurity4 min read
What You Should Know About Rising Measles Cases
Cases of measles, a highly contagious and deadly disease, are surging in parts of the US, worrying doctors and public health experts. This year, so far, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), has recorded 64 cases, already more than th
Futurity3 min read
Shark Skin Inspiration Could Lead To Better Sonar Arrays
A new textured surface designed to mimic shark skin that can reduce drag and mitigate flow-based noise, potentially opens the door to a new generation of more effective and efficient towed sonar arrays. Submarines and ships rely on towed sonar arrays
Futurity1 min read
3 Answers On The EPA Plan To Fight ‘Forever Chemicals’ In Water
The US Environmental Protection Agency has imposed the first-ever regulations limiting chemicals known as PFAS, or forever chemicals, in drinking water. Long-term, low-dose exposure to per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances, also known as PFAS or foreve

Related