Now that's an EYE-Max! 3D printed CONTACT LENSES could beam videos straight into your eyes
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You may have to switch on the TV or go to the cinema to watch a film, but in the future you could wear hi-tech contact lenses to beam moving images onto your eyeballs.
3D printed contact lenses could also be used like Google Glass or a heads up display to show wearers data and even monitor their health, researchers claim.
US scientists have taken the first step to make this possible, because they have managed to make a 3D printer that can create a five layered contact lens, where one layer beams light into the wearer's eye.
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US scientists have managed to make a 3D printer that can create a five layered contact lens, where one layer beams light into the wearer's eye. A stock image of a standard contact lens is pictured
Michael McAlpine led a team at Princeton University to build the complex machine, which in turn made the new type of lens New Scientist reported.
3D printers typically build up metallic or polymer material to form objects, as instructed by computer code, which tells the machines the desired dimensions and appearance of the end product. But this machine is more complex.
The lens printed by the machine is a transparent polymer with tiny 'quantum dot' light-emitting diodes and wires hidden inside that form electrical circuits.
Dr McAlpine said that the most challenging part of the project was working out the best chemical solvents to use in order to create each layer and how long to leave them to dry for the next layer to stick correctly.
3D printers (stock image) typically build up metallic or polymer material to form objects, as instructed by computer code, which tells the machines the desired dimensions of the end product. But this machine is more complex and can embed the tiniest electrical components in layers of polymer
The team also had to work out a way of enabling the lenses to fit differently shaped eyeballs.
To do this, they constantly scanned the lens with two cameras to check the final shape matched the wearer's prescription.
The US Air Force funded the research, because it one day hopes its pilots will be able to wear contact lenses that display in-flight data, like a heads up display for the eyeballs.
If the LEDS were replaced by light sensors, such lenses could also be used to monitor a pilots' health without the need for an invasive implant, by studying changes of the retina.
Dr McAlpine said that a sensor could be embedded inside them to detect fatigue in the eye fluids, and therefore if a pilot is exhausted.
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