Slashdot is powered by your submissions, so send in your scoop

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Displays Science Technology

How To Make Electronic Displays With Mood Ring Ink 33

Soychemist writes "Print some thermochromic ink onto a sheet of paper, put metal heating elements on the other side, and you have a rudimentary color-changing display. Chemists in the Whitesides Group at Harvard think that the devices could be used to provide a simple readout from cheap medical tests and kits that check water for pollutants. In the past year, the same scientists have made a three-cent medical test and improvised a centrifuge with an egg beater. Their aim is to invent useful gizmos with everyday materials."
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

How To Make Electronic Displays With Mood Ring Ink

Comments Filter:
  • Print some thermochromic ink onto a sheet of paper, put metal heating elements on the other, and you have a rudimentary color-changing display.

    Soychemist accidentally a noun.

  • My first thought was "Oh neat, color electronic paper." Then I thought, "But if it needs to get hot (and stay hot for that matter), it would not be very useful for a portable device like an e-book reader."

    Perhaps with some chemical tweaking they could develop dyes that work at much lower temps?

    • Perhaps with some chemical tweaking they could develop dyes that work at much lower temps?

      Hmm. Doesn't human skin go pure white when you pass a current through it? ;)

  • Resistive ink (Score:4, Interesting)

    by Rorschach1 ( 174480 ) on Saturday August 01, 2009 @02:48PM (#28910829) Homepage

    I was thinking about making a thermochromic display for a custom watch, actually. Didn't know if anyone else had tried it before, but I guess I'm on the right track. It's going to take a lot of batteries to power, but I only really want it to run for Burning Man and Maker Faire.

    I'm going to see if I can screen print resistive ink onto a PCB to make the heating elements. Failing that, I'll just go with thin film SMT resistors. Anyone know if that has been done before?

    • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

      by Anonymous Coward

      I don't know if it's been done before, but SMT resistors will work quite well. Just make sure they're rated at the temperature the thermochromic ink needs to get to... if not, you could just solder some nichrome wire across the pads. You might want to consider heat sinking things so that it will be able to cool off quickly as well... a bit of a balancing act, that.

      Good luck making it cool in time to wear while the man burns!

      • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

        by Rorschach1 ( 174480 )

        Most of the films are rated for temperatures close to room temperature, though you can get other ranges. I've used through-hole resistors as heating elements before and they do indeed work quite well. A 1-watt metal film resistor will generate enough heat at 3 watts to melt its own solder joints. Long before that happens, it gets hot enough to melt through nylon or spectra, which is what I was using it for - a thermal knife for a load release.

        It's certainly not going to be done in time this year, but may

    • (1) Put the thermochromic ink on one side of your (very thin) PCB.

      (2) Draw heating elements with a #2 (or, if you can find it, #1) pencil. You can get the resistance of a heavy graphite line pretty low; if that's not low enough, run traces along the long edges of each segment, instead of connecting to the ends.

      (3) Profit!

  • Seriously, there's nothing electronic about this, it's only the mood ring ink connected to a resistance. I mean, it's all right for a home experiment but it's hardly useful.
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      Seriously, there's nothing electronic about this, it's only the mood ring ink connected to a resistance. I mean, it's all right for a home experiment but it's hardly useful.

      It's not electronic in much the same way that thermal printers aren't electronic.

    • I mean, it's all right for a home experiment but it's hardly useful.

      Bah, you kids and your fancy electric printers. This thing is useful, boy! Why, back before we had "thermochromatic" ink, we used our feces. And we hated it.
      So be glad of this advance, sonny. And make sure you shake hands with your right hand.

      (I kinda agree. Nifty experiment, pretty useless in practice)

    • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

      by Brett Buck ( 811747 )

      Uh, it has to be "electronic" to be useful? Every hear of electric light? Or a toaster?

            Brett

    • by triorph ( 992939 )
      Do you have some different definition of electronic to the rest of us? Doesn't matter it its simple or not, hooking up a resistance to a power supply is still electronic.
      • That's just electric. From wikipedia:
        Electronics is a branch of science and technology that deals with the flow of electrons through nonmetallic conductors, mainly semiconductors such as silicon. It is distinct from electrical science and technology, which deal with the flow of electrons and other charge carriers through metal conductors such as copper. This distinction started around 1906 with the invention by Lee De Forest of the triode.
        So, there you have it.
  • what about making a electric toothbrush out of a dildo?
  • Two questions (Score:2, Interesting)

    by raktul ( 1610161 )
    What temperatures are needed to change the ink? Obviously if it needs to be really hot that is bad since it might burn the person holding it, while cooler temperatures can be affected by the atmosphere around the page causing problems. Would it make more sense to use a different material then paper to print the ink on to avoid accidental colour changes?
    • by megrims ( 839585 )

      Given that this is the substance used in mood rings--cosmetic devices which change colour according to minor variations in body temperature--I don't think burns will be an issue.

      The technology actually looks quite promising.

  • Their aim is to invent useful gizmos with everyday materials.

    What a fun project to be a part of.

    Now how about finding something much more useful to do with those clunkers besides just crushing them into scrap? The current plan -- Democratically inspired, of course -- is one of the biggest wastes of already refined and manufactured resources imaginable, and an outright giveaway to the autoworker union.

    • Right. Because that particular part of the stimulus has failed miserably.

      You know, there is a boat load of failed stuff you could be making fun of right now. Why troll something that actually seems to be working?
    • *theoretically* before a car gets crushed for scrap it's already stripped of everything useful. glass can be recycled, they'd be mad to not take out the catalytic converter (the platinum in a catalytic converter can fetch more money than the rest of the steel in the car is worth)...

      crushing for scrap is so that the parts can be melted down and recycled, which is a lot faster than digging the iron up out of the ground and smelting it into steel... unless you were thinking that the cylinder head from a 1962 F

  • by wrmrxxx ( 696969 ) on Saturday August 01, 2009 @10:24PM (#28913605)
    The summary links to Wired, which in turn links to the real article with the interesting details: http://www.rsc.org/delivery/_ArticleLinking/DisplayHTMLArticleforfree.cfm?JournalCode=LC&Year=2009&ManuscriptID=b905832j&Iss=Advance_Article [rsc.org]
  • it is simple to make it more complex..

    it has to be multilayered "sandwich":

    1 layer - insulator with horisontal conductive lines;
    2 layer - insulator mask;
    3 - filling mask with resistive compound;
    4 layer with vertical conductive lines;
    5 - on top of forth layer, printing pixels with thermochromic ink ;
    6 - protective coating layer.

    IC maybe will be like in LCD controllers but with higher currents ans slow refresh rate
    inks has to have high temperature of color changing - about 80 C - due

Math is like love -- a simple idea but it can get complicated. -- R. Drabek

Working...