Engineers at Nanyang Technological University have developed a revolutionary new camera sensor that is a thousand times more sensitive than the ones currently on the market, reports Science Daily. The sensor is made from graphene and is apparently the first that can detect broad spectrum light from the visible to mid-infrared with high photoresponse or sensitivity.
Graphene is a million times smaller than the thickest human hair (only one-atom thick) and is made of pure carbon atoms arranged in a honeycomb structure. It is known to have a high electrical conductivity among other properties such as durability and flexibility.
Notably, the sensor is also very energy efficient. It uses 10 times less energy than current sensors. Additionally, when mass produced, the graphene sensor is estimated to cost 5 times less than the current ones do.
The graphene sensor's inventor, Assistant Professor Wang Qijie, says "We have shown that it is now possible to create cheap, sensitive and flexible photo sensors from graphene alone. We expect our innovation will have great impact not only on the consumer imaging industry, but also in satellite imaging and communication industries, as well as the mid-infrared applications."
Qijie also notes that manufacturers will not have to change the process they use to produce sensors. They just need to change the base material.
"While designing this sensor, we have kept current manufacturing practices in mind. This means the industry can in principle continue producing camera sensors using the CMOS (complementary metal-oxide-semiconductor) process, which is the prevailing technology used by the majority of factories in the electronics industry. Therefore manufacturers can easily replace the current base material of photo sensors with our new nano-structured graphene material."
Would you like to be notified when someone replies or adds a new comment?
Yes (All Threads)
Yes (This Thread Only)
No
Notifications
Would you like to be notified when we post a new Apple news article or tutorial?
Yes
No
Comments (15)
Comments are closed for this article.
0
NoGoodNick - June 3, 2013 at 3:02am
I would research on how we can revive from a rotten tooth that saves us bezillions of dollars ..
0
Wow - June 2, 2013 at 5:32pm
I honestly think that iClarified should delete the comments section...
0
Funkdamentals - June 2, 2013 at 1:35pm
"5 times less" not for long...
0
Nitro Junkie - June 2, 2013 at 2:26pm
You're calling him lazy? You can't even type out a word correctly. That's lazy.
1
dark_destroyer - June 2, 2013 at 6:28am
Nice work fank u very much yes please
1
mavrik101 - June 2, 2013 at 4:12am
would be nice if Apple has time to acquire this technology into their new phone
0
KB24 - June 3, 2013 at 11:43pm
no they should not acquire it then they will use technology over & over again making it a little better each time. they will sue samsung for copying their technology then samsung can't innovate like they're doing now.
1
mavrik101 - June 2, 2013 at 4:09am
Apple never claims they invent, only innovate.
Innovation is the harvesting of several technological advancements and mass produced for consumer appeal. Though Tim Cook dislikes the concept of converging products; essentially there would be no iPhone if Apple did not harvest, multitouch screens, gorilla glass, input without a key board, music player, browser, camera and phone - all housed by a simple to use iOS in a tiny package phone. A better smartphone.
0
Mab - June 2, 2013 at 1:36am
Apple will buy over the technology and claims this is theirs invention
0
What? - June 1, 2013 at 9:30pm
Sounds a little fishy. Melamine, anyone?
1
Pigstacho - June 1, 2013 at 6:20pm
It will be a new feature in iPhone 7, and Galaxy S6, apple will sue Samsung for stealing their innovation, mark my words...
0
Wow - June 1, 2013 at 9:20pm
Why do you have to make this about Apple and Samsung...?
0
Milkman - June 2, 2013 at 4:40am
Just following apples shitty trend
1
gamerscul9870 - June 2, 2013 at 1:51pm
I'd follow your shitty trend to see how shitty it is!