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Babak Parviz,
University of Washington: Terminator-style info-vision takes step
towards reality
November 22, 2011
The streaming of real-time
information across your field of vision is a step closer to reality with
the development of a prototype contact lens that could potentially
provide the wearer with hands-free information updates.
A
single-pixel wireless contact lens display
In a study published today, 22
November, in IOP Publishing’s Journal of Micromechanics and
Microengineering, researchers constructed a computerized contact lens
and demonstrated its safety by testing it on live eyes. There were no
signs of adverse side effects.
At the moment, the contact lens device contains only a single pixel but
the researchers see this as a “proof-of-concept” for producing lenses
with multiple pixels which, in their hundreds, could be used to display
short emails and text messages right before your eyes.
The device could overlay computer-generated visual information on to the
real world and be of use in gaming devices and navigation systems. It
could also be linked to biosensors in the user’s body to provide
up-to-date information on glucose or lactate levels.
The contact lens, created by researchers at the University of Washington
and Aalto University, Finland, consisted of an antenna to harvest power
sent out by an external source, as well as an integrated circuit to
store this energy and transfer it to a transparent sapphire chip
containing a single blue LED.
One major problem the researchers had to overcome was the fact that the
human eye, with its minimum focal distance of several centimetres,
cannot resolve objects on a contact lens. Any information projected on
to the lens would probably appear blurry.
To combat this, the researchers incorporated a set of Fresnel lenses
into the device; these are much thinner and flatter than conventional
bulky lenses, and were used here to focus the projected image on to the
retina.
After
testing the contact lens in free space, it was fitted to the eye of a
rabbit, under the strict guidelines for animal use in the laboratory, to
evaluate the effect of wearing the contact lens on the cornea and the
body in general. In addition to visualizing techniques, a fluorescent
dye was added to the eye of the rabbit to test for any abrasion or
thermal burning.
After demonstrating the operation and safety of the contact, the
researchers state that significant improvements are necessary to produce
fully functional, remotely powered, high-resolution displays. For
instance, the device could be wirelessly powered in free space from
approximately one meter away, but this was reduced to about two
centimeters when placed on the rabbit’s eye.
Co-author of the study, Professor Babak Parviz, said “We need to improve
the antenna design and the associated matching network and optimize the
transmission frequency to achieve an overall improvement in the range of
wireless power transmission.
“Our next goal, however, is to incorporate some predetermined text in
the contact lens.” |