The iPhone 3GS’s Oleophobic Screen
Bill Nye (via John Gruber):
The Applers were able to do this by bonding this oleophobic polymer to glass. The polymer is an organic (from organisms) compound, carbon-based. The glass is nominally inorganic, silicon-based…solid rock. The trick is getting the one to stick to the other. Although it is nominally proprietary, this is probably done with a third molecule that sticks to silicon on one side and to carbon-based polymers on the other side. Chemical engineers get it to stay stuck by inducing compounds to diffuse or “inter-penetrate” into the polymer. The intermediate chemical is a “silane,” a molecule that has silicon and alkanes (chains of carbon atoms).
I was surprised and pleased to find that it really does work. Now, about the back of the phone…
2 Comments RSS · Twitter
I'm surprised that people like Gruber make it sound like this is something new and unexpectedly works well. Many of us have been using products like the Anti-Glare film from Power Suport on our iPhone 2Gs since the launched the iPhone. Not mainly to protect the screen, but to resist finger prints. I don't know if the technology is oleophobic, but it sure does work well.