Piezoluminescent Skin Senses Stress
Physicists in Saga, Japan, deposited a film on a ceramic substrate that emitted strong visible light when it was mechanically stressed. The researchers from Saga University and the Kyushu National Industrial Research Institute suggested that the Mn-doped, crystalline ZnS skin will find applications in actuators and optical sensors to analyze moving parts without physical contact.
ZnS:Mn luminesces with a 585-nm peak and an intensity that is proportional to the stress. Further, the piezoluminescent response is reproducible, in contrast to the phenomena produced by similar materials, which emit once when they fracture. The team noted that the long-term stability of the effect should be tested.
The results of the study were published in the March 1 issue of
Applied Physics Letters.
LATEST NEWS
- Quantum Brilliance Raises $20M
Jan 16, 2025
- Scalable Error-Correction Signals Forthcoming Efficiency Gains for Quantum Compute
Jan 16, 2025
- Fraunhofer CAP Appoints Head, Scientific Director: People in the News: 1/15/25
Jan 15, 2025
- Bioluminescent Tags Track RNA Dynamics in Live Cells in Real Time
Jan 15, 2025
- Sensing and Inspection Specialist EVK Joins Headwall Group
Jan 14, 2025
- PHOTON IP Raises $4.9M Seed Round
Jan 14, 2025
- Graphene Prevents Damage to Flexible Thin Films for Wearable Electronics
Jan 14, 2025
- Thorlabs Acquires VCSEL Developer, Longtime Partner Praevium Research
Jan 13, 2025