Abstract

While structural color is a powerful means of obtaining saturated and durable pigments that minimize absorption, scattering, and negative environmental impact, appearing naturally in animals and plants as well as in carefully designed artificial composites, it is fundamentally limited to spectral colors, leaving white and other mixed colors elusive. It also normally suffers from a strong viewing angle dependence, making color definition difficult. Herein, it is demonstrated that these challenges can be overcome by using cholesteric spherical reflectors (CSRs), spheres of polymerized cholesteric liquid crystal with radial alignment of the self‐assembled helical structure. Exhibiting omnidirectional selective retroreflectivity of well‐defined color, CSRs are discrete “packages” of structural color. This allows them to be used as pixels for generating nonspectral colors, following the principle of digital displays. A method of creating densely packed monolayers of CSRs with red (R), green (G), and blue (B) retroreflection is developed. Mixing them in equal proportions gives a white surface. By embedding the CSRs in an index matching transparent medium, nonselective specular reflections and scattering are avoided. The approach can be used to create arbitrary colors, including nonspectral ones, without any absorption or nonselective scattering, opening doors to decorating surfaces as desired while minimizing light loss.

Full Text
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