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Eye Health / Blindness News

Mirrors Made With Highly Reflective Liquids May Lead To Better Eye Exams, Improved Telescopes

Main Category: Eye Health / Blindness
Also Included In: Medical Devices / Diagnostics
Article Date: 06 Nov 2008 - 2:00 PDT

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Scientists in Canada are reporting progress toward a new type of "liquid mirror" - mirrors made with highly reflective liquids - whose shape can be changed to provide superior optical properties over conventional solid mirrors. The advance could lead to improved instruments for diagnosing eye disease, more powerful telescopes, and other applications, the researchers say. Their research will be described in the November 25 issue of ACS' Chemistry of Materials, a bi-weekly journal.

In the report, Anna Ritcey, Jean-Philippe Dery, and Ermanno Borra note that "liquid mirrors" are not new. Scientists have long recognized that these liquids could provide a low-cost, easy-to-use alternative to solid mirrors for a variety of optical applications while offering the potential for less image distortion. Researchers have recently developed liquid-mirror telescopes that use mercury as the reflective material. Mercury, however, is toxic and the shape of the surface can't be deformed or adjusted.

The scientists describe development of a new type of deformable "liquid mirror" composed of magnetic iron particles, ethylene glycol (a component of automotive antifreeze), and a coating of silver nanoparticles. These materials form a highly reflective mirror whose shape can be changed by adjusting the voltage applied to electromagnets placed below the liquid, allowing the user to fine-tune the mirror's optical properties. In lab studies, the new material showed better reflectivity and stability than current liquid-mirror materials, the scientists say.

ARTICLE
"Ethylene Glycol Based Ferrofluid for the Fabrication of Magnetically Deformable Liquid Mirrors"
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Anna M. Ritcey, Ph.D.
Departemente de Chimie
Universite Laval
Quebec, Canada
http://www.chm.ulaval.ca

Source
Michael Bernstein
American Chemical Society




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