MIT boffins create device that 'paints' iridescent structural color in real time
- Reference: 1769030530
- News link: https://www.theregister.co.uk/2026/01/21/mit_boffins_create_device_that/
- Source link:
Naming their tech [1]MorphoChrome , the team from MIT's Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory (CSAIL) has created a handheld system that uses laser light to paint iridescent programmable structural colors onto commercially available holographic photopolymer film that can then be integrated into both flexible and rigid objects.
If you're not familiar with structural color and the iridescence it creates, you might not understand why that's such a big deal, so here's a quick explanation.
[2]
Iridescent, shifting colors found in nature and in man-made objects are the result not of pigments, but physical nanostructures that allow them to reflect certain wavelengths of light depending on the angle from which they're viewed, among other factors. Structural colors tend not to fade over time because there's no pigment involved, giving them a variety of useful applications beyond simply looking cool.
[3]
[4]
As the CSAIL team noted, human methods of producing iridescent structural color have long been restricted to the domain of the laboratory.
"Scientists have created structurally colored pigments and metamaterials, but these methods require advanced chemical and material complexity, limiting access to select individuals and laboratories," the team wrote in their paper. "Creative fabrication with structural color has historically been limited to using existing natural materials, such as select shells, feathers, or gemstones."
[5]
Looking back to MorphoChrome, the CSAIL team appears to have circumvented that limitation, with the added benefit of the process being real-time and achievable with equipment limited to the aforementioned handheld device and a paired laptop.
MorphoChrome uses a 3D-printed device equipped with red, green, and blue laser diodes that are mixed in an optical prism based on the color selection a user makes in an accompanying Python app on a computer attached to the device via USB-C. The commercially available photopolymer film - the same type used to create holographic effects on passports, debit cards, and other objects - can then be "painted" using the MorphoChrome device.
You may be thinking that structural iridescence already exists on the aforementioned objects, and you'd be correct, but those effects are typically produced as fixed designs using specialized manufacturing methods, not something users can alter or "paint" in real time.
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"By adjusting color intensities in real time, users can create and modulate structurally colored brushstrokes directly by hand," the team said. "Each laser's intensity is digitally controlled through pulse-width modulation, allowing fine-grained adjustment of power and color balance."
[7]
The MorphoChrome handheld device and the demo butterfly pendant - Click to enlarge
As shown in the example image from the paper in this story, the team experimented with a butterfly-shaped pendant that had a piece of the photopolymer attached to it with resin.
MIT News [8]explained that they also used the technology to modify a pair of golf gloves that would only turn the correct color - green - when a user was holding their club in the correct position, suggesting there are other practical uses for the tech beyond just making art pieces and jewelry.
[9]Ultimate camouflage tech mimics octopus in scientific first
[10]MIT boffins double precision of atomic clocks by taming quantum noise
[11]NASA's deep-space laser comms demo has left the chat
[12]Boffins don't want to burst your bubble – they create them with sound
"We are interested in visually adaptive on-body wearables (i.e. passive color sensors), as our handheld system allows for customized, on-body designs," lead author Paris Myers, an MIT PhD student in the Electrical Engineering and Computer Science department and CSAIL researcher, told The Register in an email. Such passive color sensors could be used, for example, to tell if a wound dressing was swelling (coauthor Ben Miller has worked on such a [13]project ) or if there were changes in environmental conditions.
"Additionally, inspired by how cephalopods use polarized light reflections to communicate, we are interested in expanding this technology to integrate programmable, discrete communication and sensing via optical techniques like phase encoding," Myers added.
With such applications possible, Myers told us the next thing her team is working on is developing a reprogrammable variant of MorphoChrome, as the current version of the photopolymer film can't be reexposed to change colors. A paper on that is forthcoming, we're told.
As for commercialization of such a technology, that's not on the table right now - but it could be.
"We do not have current commercialization plans, but would love to collaborate with industry and government in the meantime," Myers explained. ®
Get our [14]Tech Resources
[1] https://camps.aptaracorp.com/ACM_PMS/PMS/ACM/SCADJUNCT25/24/04f7983d-cfc3-11f0-957d-16ffd757ba29/OUT/scadjunct25-24.html
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[7] https://regmedia.co.uk/2026/01/21/morpho-chrome-process.jpg
[8] https://news.mit.edu/2026/mit-morphochrome-paints-objects-with-light-0120
[9] https://www.theregister.com/2026/01/08/camouflage_tech_mimics_octopus/
[10] https://www.theregister.com/2025/10/17/mit_boffins_double_the_precision/
[11] https://www.theregister.com/2025/09/30/nasa_dsoc_demo/
[12] https://www.theregister.com/2018/09/12/ultrasonic_sound_bubbles/
[13] https://www.researchgate.net/publication/362409481_Scalable_optical_manufacture_of_dynamic_structural_colour_in_stretchable_materials
[14] https://whitepapers.theregister.com/
Re: Colour?
It should go back to .co.uk, shouldn't it?
Please call it "Python program"
The term App, coined by Apple, refers to something on top of ten or twenty layers frameworks to make them easy-cloud-dependent-at-every-time or to-be-cloud-dependend-for-no-reason-other-cause-they-can. Even [1]notepad is affected now in Windows 11 since it is an "App" and not a "Program". (Server 2025: Still an actual program)
So PLEASE: Python and various other languages, even if some are rather interpreter and not compiler, have programs or scripts, but no "Ääääaahhhhhpppppp!". Yes, supposed short from of "application", but honestly, "application" is in reality something you apply for, like a green card or something more desirable.
Edit: Even the linked original publication does not use that term.
Still: Controlling the light refraction with such a handy device is a damn cool thing!
[1] https://forums.theregister.com/forum/all/2026/01/21/outlook_freeze_onedrive/#c_5214721
I'm sure this discovery will really help to save the world from the threats currently facing it.
/sarc
"typically require lab-grade materials and techniques to replicate"
Or an oil leak on water.
This is going to be like LEDs
When LEDs became a thing at first red LEDs were the only ones that can be made economically. So everything had red LEDs. Then they were able to make green LEDs, so first high end stuff then everything had green LEDs. Because red LEDs said "old and out of date". Then blue LEDs came along and the same thing happened all over again.
There will be certain iridescent colors that will be easy to make at first, so all kinds of stuff from cell phones to laptops to fashion will get it, and soon it'll filter down to throwaway crap you get in fast food joints or movie theaters. New techniques will come for different iridescent colors and those will become the new trend and "last year's colors" will be looked down upon.
Colour me impressed.
I thought such technology was just a pigment of my imagination.
But it turns out to be possible. Hue knew?
Colour?
Shirley…