A laser stylus writes on a small array of multifunction pixels made from nanorod LEDs that can both emit and respond to light. Image: Moonsub Shim, University of Illinois.
A laser stylus writes on a small array of multifunction pixels made from nanorod LEDs that can both emit and respond to light. Image: Moonsub Shim, University of Illinois.

Cellphones and other devices could soon be controlled by touchless gestures and charge themselves using ambient light, thanks to new light-emitting diode (LED) arrays that can both emit and detect light.

Made of tiny nanorods arrayed in a thin film, the LEDs could produce new interactive functions and multitasking devices. Researchers at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and Dow Electronic Materials in Marlborough, Massachusetts, report the advance in a paper in Science.

"These LEDs are the beginning of enabling displays to do something completely different, moving well beyond just displaying information to be much more interactive devices," said Moonsub Shim, a professor of materials science and engineering at the University of Illinois and the leader of the study. "That can become the basis for new and interesting designs for a lot of electronics."

The tiny nanorods, each measuring less than 5nm in diameter, are made of three types of semiconductor material. One type emits and absorbs visible light; the other two semiconductors control how charge flows through the first material. This combination is what allows the LEDs to emit, sense and respond to light.

The nanorod LEDs are able to perform these multiple functions by quickly switching back and forth from emitting to detecting. They switch so fast that, to the human eye, the display appears to stay on continuously – in fact, the switching is three orders of magnitude faster than standard display refresh rates. Yet the LEDs are also near-continuously detecting and absorbing light, and a display made of the LEDs can be programmed to respond to light signals in a number of ways.

For example, a display could automatically adjust brightness in response to ambient light conditions – on a pixel-by-pixel basis. "You can imagine sitting outside with your tablet, reading. Your tablet will detect the brightness and adjust it for individual pixels," Shim said. "Where there's a shadow falling across the screen it will be dimmer, and where it's in the sun it will be brighter, so you can maintain steady contrast."

The researchers demonstrated pixels that automatically adjust brightness, as well as pixels that respond to an approaching finger, which could be integrated into interactive displays that respond to touchless gestures or recognize objects. They also demonstrated arrays that respond to a laser stylus, which could form the basis for smart whiteboards, tablets or other surfaces for writing or drawing with light. And the researchers found that the LEDs not only respond to light, but can convert it to electricity as well.

"The way it responds to light is like a solar cell. So not only can we enhance interaction between users and devices or displays, now we can actually use the displays to harvest light," Shim said. "So imagine your cellphone just sitting there collecting the ambient light and charging. That's a possibility without having to integrate separate solar cells. We still have a lot of development to do before a display can be completely self-powered, but we think that we can boost the power-harvesting properties without compromising LED performance, so that a significant amount of the display's power is coming from the array itself."

In addition to interacting with users and their environment, nanorod LED displays could interact with each other as large parallel communication arrays. While this interaction would be slower than device-to-device technologies like Bluetooth, Shim said, those technologies are serial – they can only send one bit at a time. Two LED arrays facing each other could communicate using as many bits as there are pixels in the screen.

"We primarily interface with our electronic devices through their displays, and a display's appeal resides in the user's experience of viewing and manipulating information," said study coauthor Peter Trefonas, a corporate fellow in electronic materials at the Dow Chemical Company. "The bidirectional capability of these new LED materials could enable devices to respond intelligently to external stimuli in new ways. The potential for touchless gesture control alone is intriguing, and we're only scratching the surface of what could be possible."

The researchers conducted all their demonstrations with arrays of red LEDs. They are now working on methods to pattern three-color displays made up of red, blue and green pixels, as well as working on ways to boost the light-harvesting capabilities by adjusting the composition of the nanorods.

This story is adapted from material from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, with editorial changes made by Materials Today. The views expressed in this article do not necessarily represent those of Elsevier. Link to original source.