Thermochromic materials have been
widely applied in energy-efficient
buildings, aerospace, textiles, and sensors. Conventional thermochromic
materials rely on material phase or structure changes upon thermal
stimuli, which only enable a few colors, greatly limiting their applicability.
Here, we propose and demonstrate the concept of dynamically tunable
thermochromic graphene metamaterials (TGMs), which can achieve continuous
color tunability (380–800 nm) with fast (<100 ms) response
times. The TGMs are composed of an ultrathin graphene oxide (GO) film
on a flexible metal substrate. We demonstrated that external thermal
energy can dynamically adjust the water contents in the GO film to
manipulate the color of TGMs. An impressive thermochromic sensitivity
of 1.11 nm/°C covering a large percentage of the color space
has been achieved. Prototype applications for a cup and smartphone
have been demonstrated. The reversible TGMs promise great potential
for practical applications of temperature sensing in optoelectronic
devices, environmental monitoring, and dynamic color modulation