4.8 Article

Re-Printable Chiral Photonic Paper with Invisible Patterns and Tunable Wettability

Journal

ADVANCED FUNCTIONAL MATERIALS
Volume 31, Issue 16, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/adfm.202009916

Keywords

anti‐ counterfeiting; cellulose nanocrystals; chiral photonic crystals; invisible patterning; wettability

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [52022114, 51833011, 51973238]
  2. Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities [18lgpy36]
  3. Guangdong Yang Fan Innovative & Entrepreneurial Research Team Program [2016YT03C077]

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This study presents a rewritable chiral photonic paper formed by unique nano-crystals and polycations, allowing for controlled contrast in different wetting states and independent encoding of triple invisible information. High-resolution inkjet printing enables the reversible construction of full-color patterns on the film, while leveraging the characteristics of cellulose nanocrystals and liquid crystals for complex decryption processes.
The construction of invisible patterns via high-resolution printing and the independent encoding/decoding of complex information can lead to promising applications in steganography and watermarking for optical encryption. Herein, a rewritable chiral photonic paper formed by cholesteric cellulose nanocrystals and polycation is reported. The chemically crosslinked polycation network interpenetrates in the cholesteric structure while retaining the optical properties of the photonic crystals. The film exhibits controllable wettability via anion exchange, leading to extremely low contrast in the dry state but high contrast by a rapid wetting response. Triple invisible information is independently encoded on the films, including invisible patterns caused by reversible counterion-controlled wettability, permanent fluorescent labels based on fluorescent counterions, and polarization-dependent structural colors based on cholesteric structures. Full color patterns can be reversibly constructed via inkjet printing, with a high resolution of 100 mu m. In addition, the circular polarization characteristics of the cellulose nanocrystals, liquid crystals, endow the system with complex and independent responses, realizing a wetting/polarization double-key decryption. This work provides a simple and effective optical technique for coding complex information on a single material platform and expands the techniques available to achieve invisible patterns for sensing and anti-counterfeiting.

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