Skip to main content
Update Location

My Location

Update your location to show providers, locations, and services closest to you.

Enter a zip code
Or
Select a campus/region

Toward Safer Touchscreens

Thin is safer than thick when it comes to the safety of silver nanowires — highly conductive nanomaterials a thousand times thinner than a human hair that are being used in next-generation touchscreens, report a transnational team of scientists that includes University of Florida researchers. In a new study, the team assessed the relative toxicity of different lengths and thicknesses of the material. They concluded that not only are thinner nanowires safer, they also perform as well or better than the thicker nanowires. Dr. Christopher Vulpe, M.D., Ph.D., a professor and ecotoxicologist with UF’s Center for Environmental and Human Toxicology, and Devrah Arndt, Ph.D., a postdoctoral associate in Vulpe’s lab, discuss the team’s work in this video. Visit https://bit.ly/2G6DSQx to see the original story about the research.

About the author

Sarah Carey
Public Relations Director, College of Veterinary Medicine

For the media

Media contact

Matt Walker
Media Relations Coordinator
mwal0013@shands.ufl.edu (352) 265-8395