Scientists Are Creating Smart OLED Tattoos That Can Glow

Scientists are creating “smart tattoos” that use the technology in TVs and phone screens to make tattoos glow. And scientists say there are applications for glowing tattoos that go beyond just cool looks.

The report, from Advanced Electronic Materials and reported by SciTech Daily, says the tattoos are temporary and are placed by taking the OLED tattoo paper and pressing it against the skin with a wet cloth. The smart tattoos are easily removed by scrubbing with soap and water.

While these tattoos will undeniably make for some great Halloween costumes and cosplay, scientists point to more practical uses that can greatly help people. When combined with other “tattoo electronics,” athletes can use light-emitting tattoos to detect when they are dehydrated or when they’re about to get sunburnt.

An OLED tattoo, which is about 2.3 micrometers thick or less than 1/400 of 1 millimeter. Credit: Barsotti – Italian Institute of Technology

“The tattooable OLEDs that we have demonstrated for the first time can be made at scale and very cheaply,” Professor Franco Cacialli, the senior author of the paper, said. “They can be combined with other forms of tattoo electronics for a very wide range of possible uses.”

Cacialli points to medical uses for smart tattoos that can make breakthroughs in the fight against cancer.

“In healthcare, they could emit light when there is a change in a patient’s condition – or, if the tattoo was turned the other way into the skin, they could potentially be combined with light-sensitive therapies to target cancer cells, for instance,” Cacialli said.

The OLED tattoos are approximately 2.3 micrometers thick or, as SciFi Daily puts it, 1/400 of a millimeter. The researchers successfully used the technology to make a green light glow on glass, paper, plastic, and an orange. The tattoos can also be placed on fruit or food packaging to detect when they are expired, according to SciTech Daily.

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In other science news, scientists have taught an AI to beat Pitfall on Atari and discovered that humans can fall into black holes. NASA also recently landed the Mars Rover on Mars and hid a message inside the parachute that the internet decyphered.

Anybody in a sci-fi mood can check out IGN’s list of the best sci-fi movies on Netflix or the top 10 gadgets from games, movies, and TV that we wish were real.

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Petey Oneto is a freelance writer for IGN.