The print drums on old Xerox copiers used to be Selenium. A Selenium allotrope changes resistance with light, which allowed the projection of an image
on a drum which while kept dark, had an image projected on it. Where the light hit, the charge was dissipated. The toner was then dusted on the drum,
and stuck to the dark portions. A laser printer does the same thing, using a laser to print the image on a drum. It is digitally controlled, instead
of an analogue process. It may be that the used laser print cartridges contain a drum with a layer of selenium. If they use the same process, maybe
they use the same material? I must admit I haven't taken a laser printer apart, but the old Xerox machines had a real big drum, with a lot of selenium
on them.
Alfred Morgan showed how to make a selenium photocell in one of his books. "The Boy Electrician".
It starts on page 394. You get extra nerd credit if you knew about this book, and double credit if you already have a copy
;-)http://rawfire.torche.com/~opcom/tbe/the_boy_electrician.pdf |