New Cell Phone App: Night Vision
A University of Florida engineer has crafted a nickel-sized imaging device for night vision that uses organic LED technology similar to that found in cell phone or laptop screens. But unlike night vision goggles, which are heavy and expensive, the device is paper-thin, light and inexpensive, making it a possible add-on to cell phone cameras, even eyeglasses, once it is enlarged.
“Really, this is a very inexpensive device,” said Franky So, a professor of materials science and engineering at the university. “Incorporating it into a cell phone might not be a big deal.”
So is the lead author of a paper about the infrared-to-vision device that appeared in a recent issue of the journal
Advanced Materials. Do Young Kim, a postdoctoral associate in materials science and engineering, co-authored the paper and collaborated with So on the project.
Two American soldiers pictured during the 2003 Iraq War are seen through an image intensifier. (Image: Wikimedia Commons)
Standard night vision goggles use a photocathode to convert infrared light into electrons. The electrons are accelerated under high voltage and driven into a phosphorous screen, producing greenish images of objects not visible to the eye in darkness. The process requires thousands of volts and a vacuum tube made of thick glass. That is why the goggles tend to be bulky and heavy.
So’s imaging device replaces the vacuum tube with several layers of organic semiconductor thin-film materials. The structure is simple: It consists of a photodetector connected in series with an LED. When operating, infrared photons are converted into electrons in the photodetector, and these photogenerated electrons are injected into the LED, generating visible light. The device — versions range from a millimeter in diameter to the size of a nickel — currently uses glass, but it could be made with plastics, which would make it lightweight.
Conventional night vision goggles or scopes weigh 1 to 2 lb, with price tags ranging from hundreds to thousands of dollars. Sized for cell phones, So said, his imaging devices weigh just a couple of ounces and would be inexpensive to manufacture because factories could use the same equipment as that for laptop screens or flat-screen TVs.
He added that other applications could include night vision technology for car windshields or even for standard eyewear to use at night.
So’s research is funded by Nanoholdings LLC, a Connecticut-based diversified company that licenses and develops nano-energy discoveries in partnership with universities and their scientists, and by DARPA. A University of Florida startup company, NirVision, a portfolio company of Nanoholdings, recently was formed to further develop and commercialize the technology for various market segments.
For more information, visit:
mse.ufl.edu
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