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A reaction that reminds me of sunsets

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Nanophotonics team creates low-voltage, multicolor, electrochromic glass
Rice University's latest nanophotonics research could expand the color palette for companies in the fast-growing market for glass windows that change color at the flick of an electric switch.
In a new paper in the American Chemical Society journal ACS Nano, researchers from the laboratory of Rice plasmonics pioneer Naomi Halas report using a readily available, inexpensive hydrocarbon molecule called perylene to create glass that can turn two different colors at low voltages.
"When we put charges on the molecules or remove charges from them, they go from clear to a vivid color," said Halas, director of the Laboratory for Nanophotonics (LANP), lead scientist on the new study and the director of Rice's Smalley-Curl Institute. "We sandwiched these molecules between glass, and we're able to make something that looks like a window, but the window changes to different types of color depending on how we apply a very low voltage."
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It’s a chemistry thing