Color-Coded Microparticles Could Thwart Counterfeiters

Counterfeiters beware: scientists have developed a new microscopic barcode that can be embedded into currency, credit cards, and industrial packaging. The striped microparticles are invisible to the naked eye, and only reveal their color-coded bands when excited by near-infrared light. The tiny codes can be read under a microscope, or even with a modified smartphone, with error rates of less than one in 1 billion.
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Image: Lee et al.,Nature Materials

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Counterfeiters beware: Scientists have developed a new microscopic barcode that can be embedded into currency, credit cards, and industrial packaging. The striped microparticles are invisible to the naked eye, and only reveal their color-coded bands when excited by near-infrared light. The tiny codes can be read under a microscope, or even with a modified smartphone, with error rates of less than one in 1 billion.

Paul Bisso, now a graduate student at MIT, initially teamed up with chemical engineer Patrick Doyle and colleagues to design better tags for identifying biomolecules in lab samples. But the group soon realized that the bar-coded microparticles could be adapted for other applications, including counterfeit prevention or quality control.

Commercially available micro-tagging kits, which can simultaneously measure multiple proteins or nucleic acids in biological fluids, typically offer thousands of unique codes, each represented by a different colored bead or particle, says Bisso. The lab's latest design boosts this number by combining different colors in distinctive stripe patterns. For example, a single microparticle can encode up to a million different signals using six stripes in ten possible colors. Combining hundreds or thousands individually coded particles together pushes the information ceiling even higher.

"You could barcode every grain of sand on earth," said Bisso.

The stripes get their colors from inorganic nanocrystals laced with rare-earth elements such as gadolinium, ytterbium, or erbium. These elements change the way the crystals respond to light, causing them to give off visible light of different colors when excited by invisible light in the near-infrared range. So far, the scientists have concocted about ten different hues by mixing different combinations of rare-earth elements.

Image: Lee et al.,

Nature Materials

In a final step, the researchers arrange these nanocrystal inks into a striped pattern and hit them with a flash of UV light to fuse and solidify them (technically, it's not the nanocrystals themselves but another chemical used in the process that's responsible for the fusing effect). The resulting microparticles can be laminated onto or cast inside things like blister packs for pills, credit cards, paper currency, and even ceramic objects. Doyle's patented manufacturing process also allows users to leave empty slots between stripes that can hold miniature sensors, chemical test kits, living cells, or any number of customizable features.

To demonstrate this concept, the team used microparticles seeded with nucleic acids to determine whether a solution contained two specific RNA sequences. By employing a wider range of colored stripe patterns, Bisso says researchers could conceivably run extensive batteries of genetic or biochemical tests on blood samples from hospital patients. The team describes the technology in a recent paper in Nature Materials.

Looking ahead, the researchers are confident that the technology can be readily scaled for commercial production. The microparticle-making machine is around the size of a laptop and should cost about the same, according to Bisso's projections. And each particle takes about 100 milliseconds to produce. "Imagine a factory or very large room with 100 of these devices," he said. "You're talking about on the order of tens to hundreds of millions of particles per hour. That's perfectly do-able on the industrial scale."

Doyle is now working to streamline the LED attachment that enables smartphones to illuminate and read the micro-codes. "We really want to make it a compact, easily handheld device," he said.

Future large-scale applications could include barcoding of pharmaceutical products to guard against knock-off drugs. But unlike other codes developed for this purpose, the MIT group's microparticles could also hold tiny sensors to monitor product quality. In theory, says Bisso, a spare slot in one of the microparticles could host a temperature sensor that reports whether a drug has been exposed to unsafe temperatures during handling.

The new microparticles complement a growing arsenal of covert coding technologies, says Jon Kellar, director of the Center for Security Printing and Anti-Counterfeiting Technology at the South Dakota School of Mines and Technology. Kellar has used similar nanocrystals, for example, to develop invisible QR codes. While the nano-inked QR codes can link products with a wealth of online information, the microparticles developed by Bisso and Doyle have the advantage of being able to encode so much data directly into a tiny, stealthy package, he says. That could make them especially useful for foiling would-be counterfeiters.

"It's a race, and the counterfeiters are very good," Kellar said.