• Bright idea: New LEDs can detect off-foo

    From ScienceDaily@1:317/3 to All on Mon Aug 30 21:30:36 2021
    Bright idea: New LEDs can detect off-food and lethal gases

    Date:
    August 30, 2021
    Source:
    University of Melbourne
    Summary:
    New LED technology has potential to benefit firefighters, miners,
    military, plumbers and households.



    FULL STORY ==========================================================================
    Your smart device could soon be even smarter with a new infrared light
    emitting diode (LED) that is 'tuneable' to different wavelengths of light
    -- it could enable your fridge to tell you when your food is going off
    and your phone to tell you if that Gucci purse is real.


    ==========================================================================
    The technology has been developed by the University of Melbourne, the
    Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, the University of California,
    Berkeley, and the Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for Transformative Meta- Optical Systems (TMOS). They have come up with
    a device that could identify a suite of gases, potentially including
    lethal ones, improving the safety of firefighters, miners, the military,
    and your local plumber. The work appeared in the journal, Nature.

    Infrared (IR) spectrometers are common laboratory equipment that can
    identify different materials by analysing their infrared signatures,
    which is invisible to the human eye. Just like an AM radio can be tuned
    to different frequencies of radio wave, IR spectrometers can be tuned
    to different wavelengths, giving a broad-spectrum analysis of a gas
    sample. However, these machines are bulky and expensive and not usually practical to take out of the laboratory and into the field.

    "Our new technology bonds a thin layer of black phosphorus crystals
    to a flexible, plastic-like substrate, allowing it to be bent in ways
    that cause the black phosphorus to emit light of different wavelengths essentially creating a tuneable infrared LED that allows for the detection
    of multiple materials," University of Melbourne Professor Kenneth Crozier
    said. "This technology could fit inside smartphones and become part of
    everyday use." For example, the bacteria found in meat release various
    gases as they multiply.

    The presence of these gases is a good indication that the meat is spoiling
    and is no longer fit for consumption.

    "The device placed inside a fridge could send a notification that meat
    is going off. When pointed at a handbag, it could reveal whether the bag
    is made of real leather or a cheaper substitute," said Professor Crozier,
    who is also the Deputy Director of TMOS.

    Current materials that are used for IR photodetectors and light emitting devices can be difficult to manufacture, in large part due to the need for multiple layers of perfectly linked crystals. This new black phosphorus technology requires just one layer allowing the device to be flexible,
    giving it unique properties when bent.

    "The shift in black phosphorus' emission wavelength with bending is really quite dramatic, enabling the LED to be tuned across the mid-infrared,"
    said Professor Ali Javey, from the University of California at Berkeley,
    whose group led the work.

    Importantly, the device could make the work of firefighters, miners and military safer, allowing them to identify potentially lethal gases from
    safe distances as the ultra-thin, ultra-light devices can be placed on
    small drones.

    Flying such a drone over a building fire could tell firefighters what
    dangers they face and equipment they'll need.

    The low-cost technology could also make its way into devices for use by plumbers and building managers.

    "Our IR photo detectors could be integrated into a camera so that we
    could look at our phone screen and 'see' gas leaks or emissions and be
    able to determine what kind of gas it is," Professor Crozier said.

    ========================================================================== Story Source: Materials provided by University_of_Melbourne. Note:
    Content may be edited for style and length.


    ========================================================================== Journal Reference:
    1. Hyungjin Kim, Shiekh Zia Uddin, Der-Hsien Lien, Matthew Yeh, Nima
    Sefidmooye Azar, Sivacarendran Balendhran, Taehun Kim, Niharika
    Gupta, Yoonsoo Rho, Costas P. Grigoropoulos, Kenneth B. Crozier,
    Ali Javey.

    Actively variable-spectrum optoelectronics with
    black phosphorus. Nature, 2021; 596 (7871): 232 DOI:
    10.1038/s41586-021-03701-1 ==========================================================================

    Link to news story: https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2021/08/210830092210.htm

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