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Lenses of Liquid

Fluid droplets could replace plastic lenses in cell-phone cameras, banishing blurry photos.

By Kate Greene

Friday, February 10, 2006

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We don't expect much from a cell-phone camera. For one thing, only a handful of camera phones have a lens system capable of automatically focusing on objects at different distances -- causing many fuzzy snapshots.

But there may be a solution to the problem of camera phone focus -- and one that could find uses in other devices as well. Saman Dharmatilleke, Isabel Rodriguez, and colleagues at the Institute of Materials Research and Engineering in Singapore have proposed replacing the stationary plastic lens in most camera phones with a drop of liquid, such as water, that could be auto-focused by varying the amount of pressure applied to the drop. The team's lens has no moving parts, making it rugged, and it uses only minimal electricity, so it would not drain a cell-phone battery.

[Click here to view images of the liquid lens.]

Additionally, the optical properties of liquids can be better than standard lens material. "Water is more transparent to light than glass or plastic," Rodriguez says. "Water cannot be scratched and, in principle, is defect free."

The technology, which appeared online in the January 26 issue of Applied Physics Letters, is based on the fact that a drop of a liquid with a high surface tension has a natural curvature similar to that of a conventional lens. When the drop is placed in a small well, and pressure is applied to it, the curvature of the drop alters; more pressure increases the curvature, and less flattens out the drop. As the curvature changes, so does the lens's focal length, allowing a clear image to be captured from various distances. In most cameras, the auto-focus feature mechanically moves the solid lens forward or back in order to adjust focal length. But in a liquid lens camera, the droplet stays put and only its curvature changes.

The researchers tested varying sizes of drops, from 100 microns to 3 millimeters: all responded to pressure changes within milliseconds. The bigger the lens, of course, the more light it collects, and more light produces better pictures. But when a droplet becomes too large, it is more difficult to keep stable. "Up to two millimeters the lens stays perfectly in the aperture by surface tension," Rodriguez says. "You need to shake it very hard for it to move out." She suspects that lenses one to two millimeters in diameter are ideal for most miniaturized imaging systems.

Comments

  • Click here for no image
    Perhaps I needed a better lense to see the image.
    Rate this comment: 12345
    Guest (Arnold Heiber)
    02/11/2006
    Posts:1
    • Image Links
      There's a link to the images on the first page of the article
      Rate this comment: 12345
      Guest (Erik Cox)
      04/18/2006
      Posts:1
  • student
    sir Iam a engineering student studing computer science engineering.I wnat to know many more technoligies from your website.
      Please send me.
    my mail address is
    reddy_devagiri@yahoo.com
    Rate this comment: 12345
    Guest (ravindra reddy)
    07/08/2006
    Posts:1

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