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Technology2h 7m ago

A nanomanufacturing-driven imaging chip developed through collaboration between Zhejiang University and RMIT University could allow cameras and sensing systems to detect far more detail than conventional colour imaging, including subtle differences in materials and environments.

Australia, China

Who
Zhejiang University, RMIT University, Distinguished Professor Baohua Jia, Professor Jianrong Qiu, Dr Han Lin
What
A nanomanufacturing-driven imaging chip developed through collaboration between Zhejiang University and RMIT University could allow cameras and sensing systems to detect far more detail than conventional colour imaging, including subtle differences in materials and environments.
When
Wed, 17 Jun 2026 01:51:53 GMT · 2h 7m ago
Where
Australia, China ·
Why
The technology integrates light analysis directly into imaging hardware, rather than relying on separate laboratory instruments.
The Frontline Impact

How this affects you

This breakthrough could significantly advance machine vision, automated inspection, and environmental monitoring by enabling compact spectral analysis directly at the point of imaging, potentially revealing material differences indistinguishable to the human eye.

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