4.8 Article

Reconfiguring Colors of Single Relief Structures by Directional Stretching

Journal

ADVANCED MATERIALS
Volume 34, Issue 6, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/adma.202108128

Keywords

elastomers; reliefs; security prints; structural color

Funding

  1. National Research Foundation (NRF) Singapore [NRF-CRP001-021, CRP20-2017-0004]
  2. NRF Investigatorship Award [NRF-NRFI06-2020-0005]

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Color changes can be achieved by straining photonic crystals or gratings embedded in stretchable materials, with trenches generating different colors due to variations in trench depth. Surface-relief elastomers can have multiple states accessible by mechanical straining, providing a promising application potential in optical data archival and anti-counterfeiting.
Color changes can be achieved by straining photonic crystals or gratings embedded in stretchable materials. However, the multiple repeat units and the need for a volumetric assembly of nanostructures limit the density of information content. Inspired by surface reliefs on oracle bones and music records as a means of information archival, here, surface-relief elastomers are endowed with multiple sets of information that are accessible by mechanical straining along in-plane axes. Distinct from Bragg diffraction effects from periodic structures, trenches that generate color due to variations in trench depth, enabling individual trench segments to support a single color, are reported. Using 3D printed cuboids, trenches of varying geometric parameters are replicated in elastomers. These parameters determine the initial color (or lack thereof), the response to capillary forces, and the appearance when strained along or across the trenches. Strain induces modulation in trench depth or the opening and closure of a trench, resulting in surface reliefs with up to six distinct states, and an initially featureless surface that reveals two distinct images when stretched along different axes. The highly reversible structural colors are promising in optical data archival, anti-counterfeiting, and strain-sensing applications.

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