A
two-dimensional light engraving (left) suspended in a polymer film. The
original photo (right) was projected into the film using a red- and blue-light
projector that activates a photosensitive additive in the polymer. Applying
heat to the film will erase the image and make it ready to use again. Credit:
Ivan Aprahamian/Sara Patch
Imagine
if physicians could capture three-dimensional projections of medical scans,
suspending them inside an acrylic cube to create a hand-held reproduction of a
patient's heart, brain, kidneys, or other organs. Then, when the visit is done,
a quick blast of heat erases the projection and the cube is ready for the next
scan.
A report in the journal Chem by
researchers at Dartmouth and Southern Methodist University (SMU) outlines a
technical breakthrough that could enable such scenarios, and others with
widespread utility.
The study introduces a technique that
uses a specialized light projector to imprint two-dimensional and 3D images
inside any polymer that contains a photosensitive chemical additive
the team developed. The light-based engraving remains in the polymer until heat
is applied, which erases the image and makes it ready to use again.
In short, the researchers write with light and erase with heat or light, says Ivan Aprahamian, professor and chair of chemistry at Dartmouth and co-corresponding author on the paper. In test trials, the researchers produced high-resolution images in polymers ranging from thin films to six inches thick.
The researchers are able to produce light-based
three-dimensional and animated images in polymers ranging from thin films to
six inches thick. They project slices of original two-dimensional images until
the slices combine to form a full 3D or animated image. Future work revolves around improving the process
for creating animated images. Credit: Ivan Aprahamian
The technology
is intended for any situation where having detailed, precise visual data in a
compact and easily customizable format could be critical, Aprahamian says, such
as planning surgeries and developing architectural designs. The device also
could be used for generating 3D images for education and even creating art, he
says.
"This is
like 3D printing that is reversible," Aprahamian says. "You can take
any polymer that has the optimal optic properties—that is, it's translucent—and
enhance it with our chemical switch. Now that polymer is a 3D display. You do
not need virtual reality headsets or complicated
instrumentation. All you need is the right piece of plastic and our
technology."
Readily
available polymers—such as an acrylic cube—could be transformed into a display
with the addition of the light-sensitive chemical "switch" formulated
by Aprahamian and Qingkai Qi, a postdoctoral researcher at Dartmouth and the
study's first author. The switch consists of a compound called azobenzene that
reacts to light paired with boron difluoride, which enhances the switch's
optical properties.
Once
integrated with a polymer, the switch reacts to wavelengths of red and blue light beamed
from a projector developed in the lab of Alex Lippert, professor of chemistry
at SMU and co-corresponding author of the study. Study co-author Joshua Plank
is a Ph.D. candidate in Lippert's lab. The red light acts
like ink by activating the chemical additive to create the image, Aprahamian
says. Blue light can then be used to erase it.
The projector
illuminates the treated polymer from different angles with various patterns of
light, Lippert explains. The photosensitive chemical developed in Aprahamian's
lab at Dartmouth is activated where these patterns intersect to produce 3D
patterns.
Creating 3D
projections from 2D images such as a chest X-ray would mean projecting slices
of the original image into a polymer cube or other shape until the slices
combine to form the full 3D image, Lippert says.
The
researchers have been able to produce animated images in polymers and future
work revolves around improving that process. In the meantime, the technology
reported in Chem could be developed for practical use in its
current form, such as for industry or health care.
"Scaling up requires tuning the chemical switch properties to improve resolution, contrast, and refresh rate," Lippert says. "The projector system can in principle be scaled up and developed into a turnkey system with automated hardware and associated software for easy use."
Source: New technology uses light to engrave erasable 3D images (phys.org)
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