Scientists create smart synthetic skin that can hide images and change shape
Inspired by the shape-shifting skin of octopuses, Penn State researchers developed a smart hydrogel that can change appearance, texture, and shape on command. The material is programmed using a special printing technique that embeds digital instructions directly into the skin. Images and information can remain invisible until triggered by heat, liquids, or stretching.
Synthetic materials are widely used across science, engineering, and industry, but most are designed to perform only a narrow range of tasks. A research team at Penn State set out to change that. Led by Hongtao Sun, assistant professor of industrial and manufacturing engineering (IME), the group developed a new fabrication technique that can produce multifunctional "smart synthetic skin." These adaptable materials can be programmed to perform a wide variety of tasks, including hiding or revealing information, enabling adaptive camouflage, and supporting soft robotic systems.
Using this new approach, the researchers created a programmable smart skin made from hydrogel, a soft, water-rich material. Unlike conventional synthetic materials with fixed behaviors, this smart skin can be tuned to respond in multiple ways. Its appearance, mechanical behavior, surface texture, and ability to change shape can all be adjusted when the material is exposed to external triggers such as heat, solvents, or physical stress.
The findings were published in Nature Communications, where the study was also selected for Editors' Highlights.
Inspired by Octopus Skin and Living Systems
Sun, the project's principal investigator, said the concept was inspired by cephalopods such as octopuses, which can rapidly alter the look and texture of their skin. These animals use such changes to blend into their surroundings or communicate with one another.
"Cephalopods use a complex system of muscles and nerves to exhibit dynamic control over the appearance and texture of their skin," Sun said. "Inspired by these soft organisms, we developed a 4D-printing system to capture that idea in a synthetic, soft material."
Sun also holds affiliations in biomedical engineering, material science and engineering, and the Materials Research Institute at Penn State. He described the process as 4D printing because the printed objects are not static. Instead, they can actively change in response to environmental conditions.
Printing Digital Instructions Into Material
To achieve this adaptability, the team used a method called halftone-encoded printing. This technique converts image or texture data into binary ones and zeros and embeds that information directly into the material. The approach is similar to how dot patterns are used in newspapers or photographs to create images.
By encoding these digital patterns within the hydrogel, the researchers can program how the smart skin reacts to different stimuli. The printed patterns determine how various regions of the material respond. Some areas may swell, shrink, or soften more than others when exposed to temperature changes, liquids, or mechanical forces. By carefully designing these patterns, the team can control the material's overall behavior.
"In simple terms, we're printing instructions into the material," Sun explained. "Those instructions tell the skin how to react when something changes around it."
Hiding and Revealing Images on Demand
One of the most eye-catching demonstrations involved the material's ability to conceal and reveal visual information. Haoqing Yang, a doctoral candidate in IME and the paper's first author, said this capability highlights the potential of the smart skin.
To demonstrate the effect, the team encoded an image of the Mona Lisa into the hydrogel film. When the material was washed with ethanol, it appeared transparent and showed no visible image. The hidden image became clear only after the film was placed in ice water or gradually heated.
Yang noted that the Mona Lisa was used only as an example. The printing technique allows virtually any image to be encoded into the hydrogel.
"This behavior could be used for camouflage, where a surface blends into its environment, or for information encryption, where messages are hidden and only revealed under specific conditions," Yang said.
The researchers also showed that concealed patterns could be detected by gently stretching the material and analyzing how it deforms using digital image correlation analysis. This means information can be revealed not only visually, but also through mechanical interaction, adding an extra level of security.
Shape Shifting Without Multiple Layers
The smart skin also demonstrated remarkable flexibility. According to Sun, the material can easily shift from a flat sheet into complex, bio-inspired shapes with detailed surface textures. Unlike many other shape-changing materials, this transformation does not require multiple layers or different substances.
Instead, the changes in shape and texture are controlled entirely by the digitally printed halftone patterns within a single sheet. This allows the material to replicate effects similar to those seen in cephalopod skin.
Building on this capability, the team showed that multiple functions can be programmed to work together. By carefully designing the halftone patterns, they encoded the Mona Lisa image into flat films that later transformed into three-dimensional forms. As the sheets curved into dome-like shapes, the hidden image slowly appeared, showing that changes in shape and visual appearance can be coordinated within one material.
"Similar to how cephalopods coordinate body shape and skin patterning, the synthetic smart skin can simultaneously control what it looks like and how it deforms, all within a single, soft material," Sun said.
Expanding the Potential of 4D-Printed Hydrogels
Sun said the new work builds on earlier research by the team on 4D-printed smart hydrogels, which was also published in Nature Communications. That earlier study focused on combining mechanical properties with programmable transitions from flat to three-dimensional forms. In the current research, the team expanded the approach by using halftone-encoded 4D printing to integrate even more functions into a single hydrogel film.
Looking ahead, the researchers aim to create a scalable and versatile platform that allows precise digital encoding of multiple functions within one adaptive material.
"This interdisciplinary research at the intersection of advanced manufacturing, intelligent materials and mechanics opens new opportunities with broad implications for stimulus-responsive systems, biomimetic engineering, advanced encryption technologies, biomedical devices and more," Sun said.
The study also included Penn State co-authors Haotian Li and Juchen Zhang, both doctoral candidates in IME, and Tengxiao Liu, a lecturer in biomedical engineering. H. Jerry Qi, professor of mechanical engineering at Georgia Institute of Technology, also collaborated on the project.
Sign in to highlight and annotate this article

Conversation starters
Daily AI Digest
Get the top 5 AI stories delivered to your inbox every morning.
More about
research
Google's TurboQuant saves memory, but won't save us from DRAM-pricing hell
<h4>Chocolate Factory’s compression tech clears the way to cheaper AI inference, not more affordable memory</h4> <p>When Google unveiled <a target="_blank" rel="nofollow" href="https://research.google/blog/turboquant-redefining-ai-efficiency-with-extreme-compression/">TurboQuant</a>, an AI data compression technology that promises to slash the amount of memory required to serve models, many hoped it would help with a memory shortage that has seen prices triple since last year. Not so much.…</p>
Illinois Tech computer science researcher honored by IEEE Chicago Section - EurekAlert!
<a href="https://news.google.com/rss/articles/CBMiXEFVX3lxTE13OVpWMEk1Z3hlMkR2bHNBQ2dkazFwb3VqN3hCa29GWGJvSVlPa00zd2xUakRmYXFqQmc5OWU0eGl4a21FMDAwWUN2Q3p0M3FrbXBkNV8zN0cxaG1s?oc=5" target="_blank">Illinois Tech computer science researcher honored by IEEE Chicago Section</a> <font color="#6f6f6f">EurekAlert!</font>

My Journey to becoming a Quantum Engineer
<p>I have procrastinated on documenting this process for the longest time. But I think i am ready now (maybe). <br> Coming from a front end engineering background, I am fascinated by the work being done by the quantum engineers at IBM. I am not that great with maths and statistics but I believe anything can be learned with tons of practice and consistency. I want to use this platform to hold myself accountable (that is if i don't give up half way and delete all my posts. I'll try not to btw). </p> <p>This is an article describing <a href="https://www.ibm.com/think/topics/quantum-computing" rel="noopener noreferrer">what quantum computing is</a> and some of it's use cases.</p> <p>I became an IBM qiskit advocate late last year and I have been exposed to a lot of resources and networked a bun
Knowledge Map
Connected Articles — Knowledge Graph
This article is connected to other articles through shared AI topics and tags.
More in Products
QA Risk Register & Mitigation Plans
<p>You recognize the symptoms: builds land late, test suites intermittently fail, environments go down hours before the release, and the team scrambles to micro‑patch while stakeholders ask for hard dates. Those are not purely engineering failures — they are process failures: missing <code>testing risk assessment</code>, absent scoring standards, no single <strong>risk owner</strong>, and no agreed release gating tied to the register. This lack of structure converts normal technical issues into release risk that derails timelines and burns team morale .</p> <p>Contents</p> <ul> <li>What Belongs in an Effective QA Risk Register</li> <li>How to Build a Risk Register Template (fields and examples)</li> <li>Scoring, Prioritization, and Assigning Risk Owners</li> <li>Mitigation Strategies, Moni
I Built a macOS Terminal That Detects Your AI Coding Agents — Here's Why
<p>I've been writing Swift since 2015 and building macOS apps for most of my career. I always wanted to build a terminal — not because the world needed another one, but because a terminal emulator touches everything I find interesting: low-level input handling, GPU rendering, process management, and shell integration.</p> <p>For years, it stayed on my someday list. Then two things happened at the same time.</p> <p>In late 2024, <a href="https://ghostty.org" rel="noopener noreferrer">Ghostty</a> launched and open-sourced <strong>libghostty</strong> — a production-grade terminal rendering engine built on Metal. Suddenly, I didn't need to write a GPU renderer from scratch. The hardest part of building a terminal was solved.</p> <p>Around the same time, AI coding agents went from novelty to da
I Ranked on Google's First Page in 6 Weeks — Here's Every SEO Tactic I Used (Part 2)
<p><em>This is Part 2 of my SEO case study. <a href="https://dev.to/rafaelroot/seo-case-study-from-zero-to-google-in-12-weeks-part-1">Part 1 covered the technical foundation</a>: 9 fixes, PageSpeed 58→87, and the Astro stack setup.</em></p> <p>In Part 1, I documented the baseline of <a href="https://rafaelroot.com" rel="noopener noreferrer">rafaelroot.com</a>: zero indexation, zero impressions, zero clicks. <strong>Astro SSG</strong>, strict technical SEO, mobile PageSpeed from 58 to 87.</p> <p>Now for the growth phase. This article covers weeks 3 through 6: building authority, deploying to production, and reaching <strong>position 3 on Google's first page</strong>.</p> <h2> 📊 TL;DR — Weeks 3 to 6 </h2> <div class="table-wrapper-paragraph"><table> <thead> <tr> <th>Metric</th> <th>Start</t
A whistleblower alleges Delve pitched a modified copy of open-source no-code tool SimStudio as its own, a practice that could violate the software's license (Julie Bort/TechCrunch)
Julie Bort / TechCrunch : A whistleblower alleges Delve pitched a modified copy of open-source no-code tool SimStudio as its own, a practice that could violate the software's license — The controversy surrounding compliance startup Delve has gone from bad to worse this week. Among the fresh allegations …
Discussion
Sign in to join the discussion
No comments yet — be the first to share your thoughts!