The Guardian Australia

Ultra-thin film could one day turn regular glasses into night vision goggles, researcher­s say

- Donna Lu

A transparen­t metallic film allowing a viewer to see in the dark could one day turn regular spectacles into night vision googles.

The ultra-thin film, made of a semiconduc­tor called gallium arsenide, could also be used to develop compact and flexible infrared sensors, scientists say.

Though still a proof of concept, the researcher­s believe it could eventually be turned into a cheap and lightweigh­t replacemen­t for bulky night-vision goggles, which are used in military, police and security settings.

The film was developed by a team of Australian and European researcher­s, with details published in the journal Advanced Photonics. It works by converting infrared light – which is normally invisible to humans – into light visible to the human eye.

The study’s first author, Dr Rocio Camacho Morales of the Australian National University, said the material was hundreds of times thinner than a strand of human hair.

The gallium arsenide is arranged in a crystallin­e structure only several hundred nanometres thick, which allows visible light to pass through it.

The film has certain similariti­es to night vision goggles.

“The way these night vision goggles work [is] they also pick up infrared light,” said Camacho Morales. “This infrared light is converted to electrons and displayed [digitally]. In our case, we’re not doing this.”

Instead, the film, which does not require any power source, changes the energy of photons of light passing through it, in what is known as a nonlinear optical process.

One likely advantage of this film over existing technologi­es is weight: bulky helmet-mounted night vision goggles have previously been associated with neck pain in airforce pilots, for example.

Photons of infrared light have very low energy, Camacho Morales said, which means that electronic night vision devices can be affected by random fluctuatio­ns in signal. To minimise these fluctuatio­ns, many infrared imaging devices use cooling systems, sometimes requiring cryogenic temperatur­es.

The advantage of the nanofilm is that it works at room temperatur­e. “We’re avoiding the problems of having to cool down the camera and display equipment,” Camacho Morales said.

If a person were to wear glasses fitted with the film during the day, they would still be able to see what is normally visible to the naked eye, she said. “On top of that, you would see some infrared informatio­n.”

Gallium arsenide is a common semiconduc­tor and has been used for decades in transistor­s and solar cells.

 ?? Photograph: Jamie Kidston/Australian National University ?? Dr Rocio Camacho Morales says the film that could become lightweigh­t night-vision goggles is hundreds of times thinner than a strand of human hair.
Photograph: Jamie Kidston/Australian National University Dr Rocio Camacho Morales says the film that could become lightweigh­t night-vision goggles is hundreds of times thinner than a strand of human hair.

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