Quantum Mechanics Adds A New Dimension to Touch

In: web resources

19 Feb 2010

New tech enables pressure-sensitive touch interactions.

Here’s a case of an interesting new capability made possible by an even more interesting bit of science. The BBC recently reported that “hand-held devices could soon have pressure-sensitive touch-screens and keys, thanks to a UK firm’s material that exploits a quantum physics trick.” The UX/IxD possibilities enabled by adding a pressure dimension to touch interactions are as numerous as they are exciting.

This is accomplished using a material called Quantum Tunnelling Composite (QTC). As it turns out, QTC has been around since 1996, and is being developed by Peratech Ltd. The sensing capabilities of QTC extend beyond just touch. From Peratech’s website:

Examples of potential sensing capabilities of QTC material

Peratech has come up with a very interesting collection of possible applications of their technology—definitely worth your time to peruse. I apologize if this is beginning to read like a Peratech press release, and we usually try to avoid drawing so much from a corporate website, but there’s so much fascinating stuff on their site that UX/IxD folks should know about.

The science behind QTC is intriguing, as it relies on some Star Trek-esque quantum mechanical concepts. Here’s a brief rundown by the BBC:

Spiky conducting nanoparticleThe composite works by using spiky conducting nanoparticles, similar to tiny medieval maces, dispersed evenly in a polymer.

None of these spiky balls actually touch, but the closer they get to each other, the more likely they are to undergo a quantum physics phenomenon known as tunnelling… Simply put, quantum mechanics says that there is a tiny probability that a particle shot at a wall will pass through it in an effect known as tunnelling.

Spiky conducting nanoparticles conducting electricitySimilarly, the material that surrounds the spiky balls acts like a wall to electric current. But as the balls draw closer together, when squashed or deformed by a finger’s pressure, the probability of a charge tunnelling through increases. The net result is that pressing harder on the material leads to a smooth increase in the current through it.

Full article here, images courtesy of Peratech.

For science geeks, there’s a more complete explanation (again, with apologies) on Peratech’s site.

PANiQ garmentQTC already has some mainstream commercial applications, including in PANiQ wearable electronics by QIO Systems, and in a “Tier 1 mobile phone” (Engadget) using components from Samsung Electro-Mechanics. I’m excited to see broader-scale uses of the QTC technology that makes fuller use of its ability to detect the position and pressure of inputs, especially coupled with haptic feedback. After the mild letdown of the iPad, this is something to really look forward to.


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6 Responses to Quantum Mechanics Adds A New Dimension to Touch

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green leaf

March 5th, 2010 at 10:18 am

Don't worry. It is normal.
I have had braces and so have many of my friends, It would be weirder if it didn't hurt.
It could keep hurting for up too 2 weeks.

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navyhm1983

March 21st, 2010 at 5:42 am

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adarix

March 22nd, 2010 at 6:19 pm

There is an English language description here:

But no equation to produce a quantitative increase in power.
I suppose you could work out the thermodynamics from the changes in volume and pressure, but my physics is too rusty to do that.
You do know that ethanol has a higher octane rating than gasoline?
About 140 if my memory is right. That's why you can run a higher compression ratio with alcohol.

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farrell_stu

March 27th, 2010 at 7:26 am

I don't know which book would be best, but props to you for self-study! I've studied a little bit of quantam physics, and it's really not as scary as it sounds. All you really have to know is that Schrodinger's cat is both dead and alive ;-)

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sheila

March 28th, 2010 at 2:30 am

If you are sitll concerned then see another doctor or ask your doctor to do an echo to check heart function. An echo will show the functions of ventricles and artia and all the vessels and your true ejection fraction which in a sense is how well your heart pumps.

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lilmissy

March 28th, 2010 at 10:53 pm

You will get a very good understanding by reading about Max Planck and Niels Bohr. It deals with the laws of Quantum mechanics in relation to the suatomic world and its structure. For example ,emisson of energy, such as light from an atom;yet it does not collapse. This energy is when an electron jumps from one orbit to another, that's callep a quantum leap.

I'm not so sure of time travel, that would require alot of energy,it would, I think, be possible with the employment of worm hole technology. I will get back to you on this at a later time. no pun intended.

Teleportation is not possible, as seen in Star Trek. Your atoms are alway jumping from place to place. It's not stable, even though you are solid. It would require a machine with the memory so vast it could stretch the lenght of our known galaxy, probably more.

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