Change your car’s color with an app: BMW unveils color-changing car
LAS VEGAS — German carmaker BMW has unveiled the world’s first “color-changing” car at the Consumer Electronics Show (CES) in Las Vegas.
The concept car, called the BMW iX Flow, uses electronic ink technology normally found in e-readers to transform the car’s exterior into a variety of patterns in gray and white.
Article continues after this advertisement“This is really energy-efficient color change using the technology E Ink,” said BMW research engineer Stella Clarke. “So we took this material – it’s kind of a thick paper – and our challenge was to get this on a 3D object like our cars.”
When stimulated by electrical signals controlled by a phone app, the material brings different pigments to the surface, causing the car to take on a different shade or design, such as racing stripes.
In the future, the changes would also be controlled by a button on the car’s dashboard or perhaps even by hand gestures, Clarke said.
Article continues after this advertisementNo energy is needed to maintain the color the driver selects, according to BMW.
“My favorite use case is the use of color to influence sunlight reflections,” said Clarke. “On a hot, sunny day like today, you could switch the color white to reflect sunlight. On a cold day, you could switch it black to absorb the heat.”
Though the vehicle displayed at CES could only alternate between gray and white, the technology will be expanded to cover a spectrum of colours, according to BMW.