Structural color palette of disordered colloids in the Rayleigh scattering regime
Kevin Vynck, Amina Bensalah-Ledoux, Chirine Saadi, C\'ecile Le Luyer, Romain Thomas, Denis Chateau, St\'ephane Parola, Anne Pillonnet

TL;DR
This study explores how material parameters influence structural colors produced by Rayleigh scattering in disordered colloids, providing simulations and experiments to guide the design of environmentally friendly, color-specific materials for art and design.
Contribution
It offers a comprehensive overview of structural colors via Rayleigh scattering, including a scalable process for creating targeted colors in solid composite materials.
Findings
Disordered colloids can produce consistent blue colors in reflection and transmission.
Adding black absorbents can induce blue coloration through scattering and absorption interplay.
Experimental validation with colloidal suspensions confirms simulation predictions.
Abstract
Structural coloration by Rayleigh scattering is widespread in nature and holds a prominent place in various art objects over a broad period of time, from ancient Chinese porcelains to Renaissance paintings. Beyond the common statement that Rayleigh scattering is the primary mechanism behind the multiple colored appearances of the sky, it appears that the relationship between material parameters and the colors that appear in different observation conditions has not been thoroughly explored so far. The present study aims to offer a general overview of the structural colors accessible by Rayleigh scattering as a function of the material parameters, alongside a scalable and environment-friendly process to realize solid composite materials with targeted structural colors in reflection and transmission. Monte Carlo light transport simulations are performed to compute the structural color…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPhotonic Crystals and Applications · Cultural Heritage Materials Analysis · Pigment Synthesis and Properties
