Printing stained glass
13 August 2012 Research
Nanodisks of gold and silver can create colour prints with a resolution of 100,000 dpi

The iridescent Pollia condensata berries don't fade © PNAS
The colouring comes from layers of cellulose fibrils, each arranged at a slight angle to the one beneath. These helical stacks interact with circularly polarised light to filter different colours depending on the thickness of the layers. As layer thickness varies from cell to cell, the overall effect is dappled, reminiscent of the coloured spot textures of pointillist art or pixellated digital images.
The effect was discovered by analysis of a 38-year old specimen of the fruit collected in Ghana and held at Kew Gardens in London, UK. Ullrich Steiner and a team from the University of Cambridge, UK, used transmission electron microscopy to elucidate the structure that allows the fruit to maintain its iridescence over timescales in which conventional pigments would degrade.
S Vignolini et al, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA, 2012, DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1210105109
13 August 2012 Research
Nanodisks of gold and silver can create colour prints with a resolution of 100,000 dpi
27 September 2012 The Crucible
Chemists may have finally got the blues, says Philip Ball
12 June 2013 Research
Simple method for identifying incorrect structures of organic molecules due to NMR misassignments
13 June 2013 Research
Microbe that anaerobically degrades plant biomass could help bring down the cost of biofuels
31 August 2012 Research
Microgel jab might one day eliminate the need for spinal surgery
17 June 2013 News and Analysis
Thinktank says hundreds of millions of pounds of tax breaks are going to city business firms and would be better spent elsewh...