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Cephalopod‐Inspired Design of Photomechanically Modulated Display Systems for On‐Demand Fluorescent Patterning

Huihui Shi, Shuangshuang Wu, Muqing Si, Shuxin Wei, Guoqing Lin, Hao Liu, Weiping Xie, Wei Lü, Tao Chen

2021Advanced Materials82 citationsDOI

Abstract

Cephalopods can display variable body color/patterns upon environmental stimulation via bioelectricity-controlled muscle contraction/expansion of skin chromatophores. However, it remains challenging to produce artificial display analogs that exhibit reversible and rapid switching between multiple expected luminescent patterns, although such systems are very appealing for many practical uses (e.g., data encryption). Inspired by the bioelectromechanical display tactic of cephalopods, in this work, a conceptually new photomechanically modulated fluorescent system that enables on-demand display of fluorescent patterns via a cascading stimulation-mechanical movement-optical output conduction mechanism is presented. Specifically, this biomimetic system comprises a customizable hollow display panel and a bottom-tethered photothermally responsive fluorescent actuator. Under NIR light, the photomechanically bending movements of the fluorescent actuator will immediately cover the hollow window of the display panel and synchronously manifest as the display of fluorescent patterns. Owing to its desirable time- and light-power-dependent actuating behaviors, diverse fluorescent patterns/information can be dynamically and reversibly displayed by facilely controlling this single remote NIR signal. This bioinspired strategy is universal and promising for fabricating on-demand fluorescent display platforms that combine a wide choice of fluorophores, remote control with high spatial/temporal precision, and especially single-input multiple-output features.

Topics & Concepts

FluorescenceMaterials scienceOn demandActuatorBiological systemComputer scienceNanotechnologyOptoelectronicsArtificial intelligenceOpticsMultimediaBiologyPhysicsAdvanced Sensor and Energy Harvesting MaterialsPhotoreceptor and optogenetics researchCephalopods and Marine Biology
Cephalopod‐Inspired Design of Photomechanically Modulated Display Systems for On‐Demand Fluorescent Patterning | Litcius