The animals' camouflaging capabilities have long inspired humans. The new material could one day help researchers improve ...
Stanford researchers have developed a flexible material that can quickly change its surface texture and colors, offering ...
Discover Magazine on MSN
Color-changing material that mimics octopus skin could be used for robotics
"These animals can physically change their bodies at close to the micron scale, and now we can dynamically control the ...
New octopus-inspired artificial skin mimics marine camouflage, enabling materials to transform in color and texture for ...
Octopus-inspired synthetic skin shifts color and texture via nanoscale patterning, pointing to displays, camouflage, and soft ...
Researchers have developed a flexible material that can quickly change its surface texture and colors, offering potential ...
To control color, the team sandwiched the polymer between two gold films. Light bounces off these films and interferes in ...
A team of engineers led by Alon Gorodetsky at the University of California, Irvine, has come up with a new infrared-reflecting, metalized polymer film inspired by the color-changing skin of the squid.
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