Four shades of brown: tuning of electrochromic polymer blends toward high-contrast eyewear

ACS Appl Mater Interfaces. 2015 Jan 28;7(3):1413-21. doi: 10.1021/am507063d. Epub 2015 Jan 9.

Abstract

We report a straightforward strategy of accessing a wide variety of colors through simple predictive color mixing of electrochromic polymers (ECPs). We have created a set of brown ECP blends that can be incorporated as the active material in user-controlled electrochromic eyewear. Color mixing of ECPs proceeds in a subtractive fashion, and we acquire various hues of brown through the mixing of cyan and yellow primaries in combination with orange and periwinkle-blue secondary colors. Upon oxidation, all of the created blends exhibit a change in transmittance from ca. 10 to 70% in a few seconds. We demonstrate the attractiveness of these ECP blends as active materials in electrochromic eyewear by assembling user-controlled, high-contrast, fast-switching, and fully solution-processable electrochromic lenses with colorless transmissive states and colored states that correspond to commercially available sunglasses. The lenses were fabricated using a combination of inkjet printing and blade-coating to illustrate the feasibility of using soluble ECPs for high-throughput and large-scale processing.

Keywords: color mixing; dioxythiophenes; electrochromic devices; electrochromic eyewear; electrochromic polymers; organic electronics.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Color
  • Electrochemistry
  • Lenses*
  • Oxidation-Reduction / radiation effects
  • Polymers / chemistry*
  • Polymers / radiation effects

Substances

  • Polymers