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Bacteria churn out new type of electronic paper.


For the past several years, researchers and electronics firms have pursued the goal of making a flexible computer display that looks and feels like paper. Current strategies for making e-paper, as it's called, typically rely on newly designed synthetic conducting materials. Researchers at the University of Texas at Austin are taking a more natural route: They're employing cellulose
absorbable cellulose  oxidized c.
cellulose acetate  an acetylated cellulose used as a hemodialyzer membrane.
oxidized cellulose  an absorbable oxidation product of cellulose, used as a local hemostatic.
, the main ingredient in paper.

"The idea is to emulate paper by using paper," says graduate student Jay Shah, who worked with microbiologist R. Malcolm Brown Jr. to invent the technology. The pair's goal is to make displays that have greater contrast and lower power consumption than competing technologies.

Instead of using cellulose from wood pulp wood pulp: see paper., the researchers draw on material secreted by bacteria. The fibers naturally assemble into thin films with a paper-like appearance. To make the films conduct electricity, the researchers add special dye and conductor molecules.

When the researchers place the conductive paper between two electrodes and apply a voltage, the material turns dark. The opposite voltage renders the paper light again. The switching speed between dark and fight is moderately fast, on the order of 400 microseconds One millionth of a second. See space/time and ohnosecond..

Shah and Brown have made several e-paper prototypes. One is a rewritable Refers to storage media that can be written, erased and rewritten many times. Magnetic disks and tapes and magneto-optic disks are examples. See write once. device, in which one of the electrodes acts as a pen. By passing the tip of the pen over the e-paper, users can readily draw and erase patterns on the surface. The University of Texas researchers envision making electronic newspapers, flexible e-books, and rewritable maps with their cellulose material.--A.G.
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Title Annotation:Technology
Publication:Science News
Article Type:Brief Article
Date:Apr 17, 2004
Words:252
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