Jun 19, 2026 04:52 PM
(This post was last modified: Jun 19, 2026 05:09 PM by C C.)
https://gizmodo.com/scientists-made-a-ca...2000773588
INTRO: Vantablack inspires awe and disquiet. When BMW used this “blackest black” paint on one of its 2019 concept cars, the BMW X6, the German automaker noted that any surface coated in this carbon nanotube-based emulsion “loses its defining features to the human eye, with objects appearing two-dimensional.” The result, BMW added, “can be interpreted by the brain as staring into a hole or even a void.”
Vantablack never made it onto a commercial BMW vehicle, becoming instead a glare-reduction coating proposed for satellites and spookier applications, like stealth submarines. But that hasn’t deterred Singapore-based coatings developer Nipsea Group, whose R&D wing has now announced a more resilient blacker-than-black paint that it hopes will meet China’s burgeoning demand for deep-black luxury vehicles. Nipsea’s Vantablack-inspired composite, the researchers said, has proven capable of absorbing an average of 99.9% of all visible light wavelengths.
This new “ultra-black coating,” as the team wrote in its new paper for the journal Matter & Light, also remained “notably stable” even after humidity and water resistance tests—qualifying it for “application as ultra-black automotive coating.”
“In China, car color has become a key selling point,” Nipsea research chemist Zhiwei Liu said in a statement. “Deep black finishes have long been the premium choice and signature color for luxury cars due to their elegant appearance, powerful visual impact, and luxurious undertone.” (MORE - details)
https://youtu.be/akv3ip3kLng
https://www.youtube-nocookie.com/embed/akv3ip3kLng
INTRO: Vantablack inspires awe and disquiet. When BMW used this “blackest black” paint on one of its 2019 concept cars, the BMW X6, the German automaker noted that any surface coated in this carbon nanotube-based emulsion “loses its defining features to the human eye, with objects appearing two-dimensional.” The result, BMW added, “can be interpreted by the brain as staring into a hole or even a void.”
Vantablack never made it onto a commercial BMW vehicle, becoming instead a glare-reduction coating proposed for satellites and spookier applications, like stealth submarines. But that hasn’t deterred Singapore-based coatings developer Nipsea Group, whose R&D wing has now announced a more resilient blacker-than-black paint that it hopes will meet China’s burgeoning demand for deep-black luxury vehicles. Nipsea’s Vantablack-inspired composite, the researchers said, has proven capable of absorbing an average of 99.9% of all visible light wavelengths.
This new “ultra-black coating,” as the team wrote in its new paper for the journal Matter & Light, also remained “notably stable” even after humidity and water resistance tests—qualifying it for “application as ultra-black automotive coating.”
“In China, car color has become a key selling point,” Nipsea research chemist Zhiwei Liu said in a statement. “Deep black finishes have long been the premium choice and signature color for luxury cars due to their elegant appearance, powerful visual impact, and luxurious undertone.” (MORE - details)
https://youtu.be/akv3ip3kLng

![[Image: 4-Side-profile_Surrey-Nanosystems-300x400.jpg]](https://blog.sciencemuseum.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/sites/12/2016/02/4-Side-profile_Surrey-Nanosystems-300x400.jpg)