Nokia has
built a flexible mobile phone using nanotechnology which the company says will
become increasingly commonplace in the future.
The
Morph
device can be used as a keyboard, then bent around the wrist and worn as a
bracelet.
The handset giant first touted the system five years ago and it has taken
researchers at the
Nokia
Research Centre in Cambridge this long to get a working prototype.
Dr Tapani Ryhanen, head of the research centre, said: "We hope that this
combination of art and science will showcase the potential of nanoscience to a
wider audience.
"The research we are carrying out is fundamental to this as we seek a safe
and controlled way to develop and use new materials."
Nokia claimed that the technology will be in mainstream phones by 2015, but
that there are technical challenges still to overcome. Chief among these is
power, and Nokia is investigating the use of new battery materials.
Professor Mark Welland, head of the
Nanoscience
Group at the
University
of Cambridge, said: "Developing the Morph concept with Nokia has provided us
with a focus that is artistically inspirational and sets the technology agenda
for our joint nanoscience research."
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