Optical technology has given us lasers, fibre optic cables, DVD and Blu-ray, the Internet, to name but a few. The scientists at the University of Southampton’s Photonic Metamaterials Programme, believe the next photonic revolution will be nanotechnological. They have found a way to manipulate light at microscopic levels on the surface of gold to change its colour appearance. This is the first time the visible colour of metal has been changed in this way and could be used in jewellery-making, or as a financial security feature.
To understand the minute scale of a nanometre, consider that a single gold atom is about a third of a nanometre in diameter. Metamaterials are manmade with unusual functionality, which is achieved by artificially manipulating its structures at the nanometre scale and each individual structure is smaller than the wavelength of the incidental light. The nano-patterned metal is therefore a ‘metamaterial’, engineered to provide optical properties not found in nature.
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