Graphene Based Display Paves Way For Semi-Transparent Electronic Devices 51
hypnosec writes University of Manchester and University of Sheffield researchers have managed to produce the first graphene-based LED displays, which could pave the way for efficient, flexible and semi-transparent electronic devices. The research, published in scientific journal Nature Materials [abstract; article is paywalled], shows how graphene displays and related 2D materials could be utilised to create light emitting devices for the next-generation of mobile phones, tablets and televisions to make them incredibly thin and durable. The LED device was constructed by combining different 2D crystals and emits light from across its whole surface. Being so thin, at only 10-40 atoms thick, these new components could form the basis for the first generation of semi-transparent smart devices.
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For that you don't need a transparent device. You just need a transparent display.
Those are two different things actually.
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Yes, so it would not be a HUD perhaps, but the screen could be a display. That way it could work during the day as well.
So... maybe something to let me play Call of Duty Advanced Warfare while I'm driving to work?
That would be so much better than Candy Crush or just texting... </jk>
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I don't know why all the negative replies to your question. Current car HUDs are far from ideal - they don't work well in daylight, and the resolution is usually poor, limiting the amount of information that can be shown. A high-resolution semi-transparent display, if it was transparent enough to see clearly through, and bright enough to see activated pixels in daylight, could be a big step forward in in-car HUDs. Sounds like there's a long way to go until there are actual products based on this tech though
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The cost would be smaller than imbedding a mistress...
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Very true.
Mumbles something about stupid spell check on phone...
Why? (Score:3, Insightful)
Why do we want semi transparent smart devices?
Re:Why? (Score:4, Informative)
Good frigging question
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Mmm... chips... <noise="gargle">
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Imagine a bowl of soup that would not only display the amount of calories you ingest with every spoonful, but also prod incessantly about your body weight. Now extend this technology to plates and other diningware, and combine it with forks that hum a joyful morse code rendition of 'O Come All Ye Fatties.
And hey presto, your nextgen transparent diningware cuts the obesity rate by 10%.
And surely you've thought about the endless potential of having corporations advertise the latest and greatest diet coke form
Re:Why? (Score:4, Interesting)
I don't know about semi-transparent but flexible so that it doesn't break so easily would be nice.
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Except whenever a device has any flex to it we hear people complain that it doesn't feel solid enough or premium enough, so people scream for metal frames instead of plastic etc.(Current technology can do plenty of flex from the stand point of avoiding breakage, but people don't want it.)
iPhone 6 Plus (Score:2)
I hear it is pretty flexible already...
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XZibit
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Take a look at augmented reality. [wikipedia.org]
Re:Why? (Score:4, Insightful)
We don't. Just like we don't want our coffee makers on the web, or our every online move tracked by companies.
What makes you think consumer demand matters? Build it, and then manufacture the demand.
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Re:Why? (Score:4, Interesting)
They make coffee makers that you fill with beans and water the night before, and it will grind the coffee and start the brewing so it is ready at a precise time. I have no objection to a programmable device. I even have no real objection to a LAN controllable device. My objection is to a device that connects to the internet. Because that last leap is just to spy on me.
Or in other words, I've never been on vacation and been like "must make coffee right now."
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There's no way around that, unless you want a robot or something. Because the grounds won't put themselves in the coffee maker. And you can program it to work 5 days a week. Hell, you can even hook a water line up.
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Or to allow hackers to brick your coffee maker, so you have to buy a new one.
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Why do we want semi transparent smart devices?
Because they are newer than opaque smart devices.
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Distributed deserializers and switches on Ludicrous-Density displays?
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Well, we can use them for HUDs so you can display information while still keeping your eyes on the road.
Integrate them into glasses and you can do a Google Glass style overlays - great for workers who need to access technical documentation and other things while deep inside a complex piece of equipment. Or first responders who can get information when they need it without having to look at equipment (firefighters would love to have a moving map of their location
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Everything old is new again (Score:5, Funny)
Change Graphene to OLED and you will be able to use all the old news stories from 10 years ago.
Comment removed (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Everything old is new again (Score:5, Funny)
Yep, it works.
That's what she sed.
Re:Everything old is new again (Score:4, Informative)
OLED would work well if it didn't have such a bad half-life (at least if the blue component didn't have a bad half-life) which causes the display to turn yellow as it ages. I haven't heard anybody discuss what the half-life of graphene is though, so it could be just as bad.
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Well there's the rub. Graphene is in that monumental hype phase where no one really considers the problems with it.
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I haven't heard anybody discuss what the half-life of graphene is though, so it could be just as bad.
They're probably still working that out. It's one thing to know that it's theoretically possible, but another to demonstrate how to actually do it, so the report that it has been done (even if it turns out to not be very useful in the end) is relevant.
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Seriously, I'm tired of all these promises of graphene going from curing cancer and HIV to building everlasting batteries out of it to transmitting petabytes of information over a carbon-thick wire... Producing just a small amount of this "miracle material" costs a lot, can't be used out of a lab-controlled environment and it's polluting as hell. Until all of that gets reversed
Speaking of display issues (OFFTOPIC) (Score:3)
Did nobody at DICE test the CSS changes? Because the front page is broken on a 960px-wide window now, and it wasn't yesterday. Since that's a window pinned to half of a 1080p screen, and /. doesn't come close to actually needing a full 1920px, I'm sure there's a lot of people browsing the same way, and I'm sure a lot of them won't be browsing back if you keep fucking basic shit up like this.
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A simple browser window resizing seems to give me 1192 pixels wide as the minimum required for this page.
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Addendum: this is no longer the case on the front page, but page 2 is now broken in the same way. It seems to be caused by the image on "Listnr Wants to be 'Your Listening Assistant' (Video)" [slashdot.org].
I do not recall having problems with video posts before, so I still suspect some recent CSS changes are breaking things that were once working. Was the lesson not learned after Beta? Don't break things that currently work.
Big whoop (Score:2)
Wake me when a low-power display can be read in full noon desert sunlight.
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You mean like e-ink. [wikipedia.org] Their latest versions are even "semi-flexible" and now support color.
Semi-Transparent (Score:2)
Why this is interesting (Score:2)
They created a structure with band gaps by layering multiple materials including graphene [nature.com].