The Art of Science

Exploring the connections between art, technology, literature, and science

LED tattoos November 3, 2009

implantable electronics By building thin, flexible silicon electronics on silk substrates, researchers have made electronics that almost completely dissolve inside the body. So far the research group has demonstrated arrays of transistors made on thin films of silk. While electronics must usually be encased to protect them from the body, these electronics don’t need protection, and the silk means the electronics conform to biological tissue. The silk melts away over time and the thin silicon circuits left behind don’t cause irritation because they are just nanometers thick.

“Current medical devices are very limited by the fact that the active electronics have to be ‘canned,’ or isolated from the body, and are on rigid silicon,” says Brian Litt, associate professor of neurology and bioengineering at the University of Pennsylvania. Litt, who is working with the silk-silicon group to develop medical applications for the new devices, says they could interact with tissues in new ways. The group is developing silk-silicon LEDs that might act as photonic tattoos that can show blood-sugar readings, as well as arrays of conformable electrodes that might interface with the nervous system.

Last year, John Rogers, professor of materials science and engineering at the Beckman Institute at the University of Illinois at Champaign-Urbana, developed flexible, stretchable silicon circuits whose performance matches that of their rigid counterparts. To make these devices biocompatible, Rogers’s lab collaborated with Fiorenzo Omenetto and David Kaplan, professors of bioengineering at Tufts University in Medford, MA, who last year reported making nanopatterned optical devices from silkworm-cocoon proteins.

To make the devices, silicon transistors about one millimeter long and 250 nanometers thick are collected on a stamp and then transferred to the surface of a thin film of silk. The silk holds each device in place, even after the array is implanted in an animal and wetted with saline, causing it to conform to the tissue surface. In a paper published in the journal Applied Physics Letters, the researchers report that these devices can be implanted in animals with no adverse effects. And the performance of the transistors on silk inside the body doesn’t suffer.

In the silk-silicon electronics, the silk plays a passive but important role. “Silk is mechanically strong enough to act as a support, but if you pour water on it, it conforms to the tissue surface,” says Omenetto. Silk is already approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration for medical implants and is broken down completely by the body into harmless by-products. The silk sheets are flexible, and can be rolled up and then unfurled during surgery, making them easier for surgeons to work with. By adjusting the processing conditions used to fabricate the films, the Tufts researchers can control the rate at which the films will degrade, from immediately after implantation to years.

The biocompatibility of silicon is not as well established as that of silk, though all studies so far have shown the material to be safe. It seems to depend on the size and shape of the silicon pieces, so the group is working to minimize them. These devices also require electrical connections of gold and titanium, which are biocompatible but not biodegradable. Rogers is developing biodegradable electrical contacts so that all that would remain is the silicon.

The group is currently designing electrodes built on silk as interfaces for the nervous system. Electrodes built on silk could, Litt says, integrate much better with biological tissues than existing electrodes, which either pierce the tissue or sit on top of it. The electrodes might be wrapped around individual peripheral nerves to help control prostheses. Arrays of silk electrodes for applications such as deep-brain stimulation, which is used to control Parkinson’s symptoms, could conform to the brain’s crevices to reach otherwise inaccessible regions. “It would be nice to see the sophistication of devices start to catch up with the sophistication of our basic science, and this technology could really close that gap,” says Litt.

Original article

 

Glow-in-the-dark Steak October 9, 2009

Becky Stern (CC)

Becky Stern (CC)

Cool, huh?

It’s an entry into an Arduino Contest

Arduino is an open-source electronics prototyping platform based on flexible, easy-to-use hardware and software. It’s intended for artists, designers, hobbyists, and anyone interested in creating interactive objects or environments. “with one simple controller, you can make almost anything!” 

Evil Mad Scientist Laboratories and the Arduino Team have teamed up to put on an Arduino contest. More explained on Wired and Instructables:

Use those nifty microcontrollers to build an cool project and maybe win a prize! The rules are simple: to enter you must make a new Instructable that involves the Arduino IDE. You can use any hardware that you like, or none at all. Be sure to provide the code you used so that others can follow in your footsteps. Make something amazing and win a sweet Meggy Jr RGB from Evil Mad Science or an Arduino Mega from the Arduino Team to power your next project!

Deadline is November 15th!

Contest Starts: Oct 1, 2009
Entry Deadline: Nov 15, 2009
Voting Starts: Nov 16, 2009
Voting Ends: Nov 22, 2009
Judging Starts: Nov 23, 2009
Judging Ends: Nov 30, 2009

 

Top 10 Tech Influences on Rock & Roll October 1, 2009

Filed under: Illumination, Optics, communication and networking — scientiste @ 6:18 am
Tags: , ,

Technology has shaped how we make, hear, and share music. “Rock simply wouldn’t have rocked without electric guitars, Marshall amp stacks, the Vox Box, amplifiers capable of projecting the music to the crowd, or stage effects that helped create a spectacle.”

This is not my list, but from PC World (you wonder if they might  be a little bias?). They’ve got everything from Beatles concerts to music videos.

#8: The Wall

#8: The Wall

One thing they forgot: the Record Player! They included the synthesizer but not the record player? Geez!

 

Word Clock September 29, 2009

Filed under: Illumination, Optics, electronic imaging and displays — scientiste @ 12:35 pm
Tags: , , , ,

A cool, if perhaps slightly involved, DIY: A clock that shows the time using words, not numbers. Great for the numeriphobe in your life!

This is actually a pretty cool piece of art and technology.

MAKE subscriber Doug took up the challenge to re-make the word clock he saw here a few weeks ago, and wrote in to share his project with us. He built the front panel using an etched PCB (no laser cutter required!), and constructed a circuit board to illuminate the proper display sections using LEDs. Instructions and board layouts are available on his Instructable.

 

Free Museum Day tomorrow September 25, 2009

September 26th is Annual Museum Day, and lots of museums and parks are offering free admission in celebration. Read on for more:

On Sept. 26, as part of the fifth annual Museum Day program, Smithsonian magazine has convinced more than 1,200 other museums, zoos, and arts and cultural attractions across the country to also welcome visitors for free.

In California, you’ll can use your Museum Day admission card to visit the classic cars displayed at the California Automobile Museum in Sacramento (regular adult admission: $8), in New York City you can use your pass at the South Street Seaport Museum (regular adult admission: $10), and in Dallas, your pass will get you into the Sixth Floor Museum at Dealey Plaza (regular admission: $13.50), which explores the assassination and legacy of President John F. Kennedy. 

To see the full list of all the participating museums so you can plan your day, visit the Smithsonian’s Museum Day 2009 Web site and poke around. Be ready to be a bit overwhelmed.

 

LED jewelry September 14, 2009

LED DIY gets trendy! In the New York Times, a story about the latest fashion craze: Light-up fashion!

IN Alison Lewis’s girlish, pale-blue living room here, pillows light up when you sit on them and the sofa fabric has a dimmer switch; teacups moved along acrylic coffee tables will play videos on the giant flat-screen television, and a mechanical bluebird nestled in the white plastic boxwood surrounding the television trills erratically when its eye detects movement in the room.

This is an environment that will always acknowledge you, but it’s a cozy interactivity, the softer side of technology.

Ms. Lewis, 35, is part of a wave of young product designers intent on embedding electronics into “soft” areas like fashion or home furnishings. She has the can-do spirit that defines the modern crafter and hopes to engage other young women in her blinking, D.I.Y. world. Threading LEDs, she claims, is akin to knitting. (LED beads are like tiny glowing sequins; Ms. Lewis uses conductive thread to sew them onto fabric.) “I do it to relax,” she said.

Her work can involve some unlikely materials: perhaps a length of electroluminescent wire or yards of conductive fabric; the motor prized out of an electric toothbrush; a motion sensor.

Read the full article at NYT.

Check out Lewis’ website: http://iheartswitch.com

Ceramic teacups have radio frequency ID tags on their bases; when placed on a reader, they signal videos to play on the television.

Ceramic teacups have radio frequency ID tags on their bases; when placed on a '"reader," they signal videos to play on the television.

 

Special effects steal the show August 19, 2009

From BBC News:

For many modern artists the muse lurks online, in the web of social networks, instant messages and distant friends.

Far from turning us into a nation of reclusive typists, the internet is proving to be a rich catalyst of emotive experiences and settings for playwrights to explore the age old worries of life, love, tragedy and humanity.

One of those playwrights is Lee Freeman. His first professional musical is “Chat! The Internet Musical” playing at George Square Theatre. “Using online technology gave me a reason to write a more modern, contemporary piece, which is much more compelling to the audience”

With over 2000 shows at the Edinburgh Fringe, is the use of the internet a gimmick just to get bums on seats?

“When you first start writing you can’t escape that it is a bit of a gimmick,” said Mr Freeman. “But once people are in the theatre, watching the show, the chatroom environment allows the characters and the story to develop in front of them. The challenge is in making something that is so unreal into something that is real on stage.”

Read full article.

 

Top 10 (Science) Music Videos July 16, 2009

As compiled by Wired Science:

Music can make the driest scientific concepts entertaining, or even hilarious. Catchy tunes about DNA blend genetics with jokes. Ballads about the heart and pi bring dull facts to life. Here are some of our favorite videos that show how hard science rocks.

Click here for their list.

My personal favorite? The Nano Song. Why? Because it’s got puppets! Puppets are so much better at explaining the values of a healthy diet, the ABCs, and making political turmoil laughable!

 

World Science Festival June 9, 2009

Starting tomorrow, June 10th, and continuing through Sunday, June 14th. In New York.

The event is chaired by Brian Greene, a physicist at Columbia University and recognized for a number of groundbreaking discoveries in his field of superstring theory, is also well-known for his efforts to make science accessible. He’s written a children’s book about the theory of relativity and appeared on the radio program RadioLab several times.

One director on the board is Alan Alda, who played Hawkeye Pierce on the classic television series, M*A*S*H, and, more recently, appeared in continuing roles on ER and The West Wing.

The festival plans to

“cultivate and sustain a general public informed by the content of science, inspired by its wonder, convinced of its value, and prepared to engage with its implications for the future. The World Science Festival, an unprecedented annual tribute to imagination, ingenuity and inventiveness, takes science out of the laboratory and into the streets, theaters, museums, and public halls of New York City, making the esoteric understandable and the familiar fascinating.”

Maybe I’m just totally out of the loop, but this is the first time I’ve seen ads for this. Whoever did their publicity did not get much past New York City. Which maybe was their point. They’ve included venues all over New York, from parks to art museums to universities.

One event that looks really fun is their Bio Blitz planned in Manhatten and Brooklyn.

“Professional naturalists and research scientists will guide urban explorers of all ages and backgrounds in a scientific inventory of the flora, fauna, fungi — and all things crawly. In honor of E.O. Wilson, pioneer of the Bio Blitz method, this event will inspire Wilson-like wonder and appreciation for the natural diversity found right in our own neighborhood.

The Bio Blitzes will be a scientific survey to catalog all of the species found at the sites. The Blitzes will be part contest (to identify as many species as possible), part educational event, and part scientific endeavor. All programs will be free with the idea of engaging families and lay-people at the community level. Other educational activities could include field explorations and interpretative walks and talks to increase the public’s awareness of the diversity of their own “backyard”.”

There is a talk on Sunday featuring E.O. Wilson and Mark Moffett talking about what they’ve found on Bio Blitzes.

The festival also plans to have concerts, speakers, and all sorts of events over the weekend. It also looks like many of the events are free. If you are anywhere in the area, I highly recommend it.

 

Digital Graffiti Festival June 4, 2009

From GeekDad:

If you have a digital projector, practically any blank surface nearby becomes a canvas for your art. That’s the idea behind a fad that’s cropped up in the past couple of years. Fans have even begun setting up events to show off the best stuff. 

This weekend, digital artists from around the world will project original works onto a town’s white walls at the second annual Digital Graffiti Festival. Hosted in Alys Beach, Florida, this festival is the first outdoor festival specifically organized to celebrate and showcase these unique talents.

Read more of the article and see more pictures on GeekDad.