While I see the usefulness of this product, I question its recyclability. We dispose of enough paper as it is, but at least now it breaks down. If we embed metals into this paper, they’re not going to be easily separated without another step in the recycling process. Still, yeah ok, it’s kinda neat.
Boxes that sense the weight of their contents and books that talk back when pages are turned could be developed using technology being tested by researchers at MIT in the US.
They are making paper with wires, sensors, and computer chips embedded, a technology dubbed ‘Pulp-based’ computing.
To make electronically-enhanced paper the team produces a layer of paper pulp and lays down wires or patterns of conductive ink on top. Adding another layer of pulp, pressing and drying it leaves electronics embedded within the paper.
Adding two layers of conductive ink allows the paper to sense when it bends. If incorporated in a book, such pages "could play sounds or light up as they are turned, supporting more interactive forms of storytelling," Coelho suggests. They could also allow cardboard boxes to sense the weight inside them by measuring the stresses on their walls, he adds.
"The advantage of paper over other materials is that we can make interactive objects that still look and behave like paper," Coelho says. People can interact with pulp-based computers as they would with paper, he adds, folding or writing on it, or even ripping it up.
Source: NewScientistTech