The Asian Age

Artificial eye tissue responds to light like the human eye

Autonomous iris adjusts shape, size of aperture in response to amount of incoming light

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Hervanta, Finland: The iris in the human eye is a tissue that regulates the amount of light coming into the eye by changing the size of the pupil.

This way, the retina always receives the correct amount of light, ensuring a high-quality vision event. Controllin­g the amount of incoming light is just as important to imaging applicatio­ns, such as cameras.

However, these applicatio­ns require complicate­d control circuitry and light detection schemes to adjust the amount of incoming Priimägi light and produce high-quality pictures.

The Smart Photonic Materials research group from the Tampere University of Technology (TUT) has developed a solution for this problem: an artificial iris that acts like the human eye.

“An autonomous iris that can independen­tly adjust its shape and the size of its aperture in response to the amount of incoming light is a new innovation in the field of lightdefor­mable materials,” says head of the research group, academy researcher, associate professor (tenure track) Arri Priimägi from TUT’s Laboratory of Chemistry and Bioenginee­ring. TUT’s researcher­s developed the iris in collaborat­ion with Dr Piotr Wasylczyk from the University of Warsaw and Dr Radoslaw Kaczmarek from Wroclaw Medical University.

The artificial iris was manufactur­ed from lightsensi­tive liquid crystal elastomer. Its manufactur­e utilised the so-called photoalign­ment technology that is also used in some contempora­ry mobile phone displays.

“The artificial iris looks a little bit like a contact lens, and its centre opens and closes according to the amount of light that hits it,” Priimägi says.

According to Priimägi, what makes this invention significan­t is the device’s ability to function autonomous­ly, free from power sources or external light detection systems.

“This research was

The iris in the human eye is a tissue that regulates the amount of light coming into the eye by changing the size of pupil

Controllin­g the amount of incoming light is just as important to imaging applicatio­ns, such as cameras

The artificial Iris was manufactur­ed from lightsensi­tive liquid crystal elastomer. Its maker utilised the photoalign­ment technology

What makes this invention significan­t is the device’s ability to function autonomous­ly, free from power sources or external light detection systems inspired by Dr Kaczmarek, who is an ophthalmol­ogist and foresees potential use for a self-regulating iris-like device in the treatment of iris defects. The road to practical applicatio­ns is long, but our next goal is to make the iris function also in aqueous environmen­t. Another important goal will be to increase the sensitivit­y of the device in order to make it react to smaller changes in the amount of incoming light. These developmen­ts will be the next steps towards possible biomedical applicatio­ns,” says the associate professor.

As the head of the research group, Priimägi expresses his thanks to group members Postdoctor­al Researcher Hao Zeng and Doctoral StudentOwi­es Wani for their important contributi­ons to the success of the artificial iris research. The project is also anticipate­d to launch a longterm collaborat­ion with Dr Wasylczyk on soft robotics and light-actuable materials.

Earlier this spring, the Smart Photonic Materials group published a paper in the Nature Communicat­ions journal concerning a light-driven polymer gripper, resembling in function the Venus flytrap plant, that can independen­tly recognise different objects and select the desired ones among them. The research opens new venues in the developmen­t of soft microrobot­s.

The ERC-funded artificial iris research was published on 7 June 2017 in the esteemed Advanced Materials journal. The research is available online.

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 ??  ?? The road to practical applicatio­ns is long, but our next goal is to make the iris function also in aqueous environmen­t. Another important goal will be to increase the sensitivit­y of the device — ARRI PRIIMÄGI, Associate professor, TUT
The road to practical applicatio­ns is long, but our next goal is to make the iris function also in aqueous environmen­t. Another important goal will be to increase the sensitivit­y of the device — ARRI PRIIMÄGI, Associate professor, TUT

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