Updated
Updated · Chemical & Engineering News · Jun 18
Researchers Develop 99.9% Light-Absorbing Coating for Cars and Optical Systems
Updated
Updated · Chemical & Engineering News · Jun 18

Researchers Develop 99.9% Light-Absorbing Coating for Cars and Optical Systems

2 articles · Updated · Chemical & Engineering News · Jun 18

Summary

  • More than 99.9% of visible light is absorbed by a new ultrablack coating that also passes humidity, water-resistance and adhesion tests required for automotive use.
  • Researchers achieved that balance by combining carbon nanotubes with conventional carbon-black pigment, creating a microscopic peaks-and-valleys structure that traps light through repeated scattering.
  • Standard industrial milling equipment and conventional spray-coating methods can produce and apply the material, addressing the cost and fragility problems that have limited nanotube-based coatings such as Vantablack.
  • Luxury vehicles are an immediate target, but the coating could also reduce stray reflections in optical and sensing systems, where extreme blackness helps suppress noise.

Insights

Can a new ultra-black paint give Chinese car brands a decisive edge in the global luxury market?
Beyond cars, could this durable black coating revolutionize solar energy or even stealth technology?
If a car can absorb 99.9% of light, what happens to vehicle safety and detection systems?