The shape-changing smartphone allows users to fold open up to three flexible electrophoretic displays to provide extra screen real estate, the amount of space available on a display, when needed.
Displays are detachable such that users can fold the device into various shapes that can range from an ultra notebook shape to a foldout map.
"In PaperFold, each display tile can act independently or as part of a single system," said Dr Vertegaal, a professor in the School of Computing and Director of the Human Media Lab at Queen's University, Canada.
PaperFold automatically recognises its shape and changes its graphics to provide different functionality upon shape changes.
For example, folding the device into an ultra notebook form factor opens up a keyboard on the bottom screen. Users could use this form factor to type a search.
By flattening PaperFold's three displays, the user changes views to a Google map that spans all screens.
Shaping PaperFold into a convex globe shows the map in Google Earth view.
Researchers said the inspiration for PaperFold came from its namesake: paper.
Typically, mobile devices require scrolling or zooming in order to see different parts of a document whereas paper can be folded, detached or combined allowing it to be accessed in multiple parallel forms.
"The development of electronic paper computers that can adopt similar qualities to paper has been an enduring research goal for our team," said Vertegaal.
"The PaperFold smartphone adopts folding techniques that makes paper so versatile, and employs them to change views or functionality of a smartphone, as well as alter its screen real estate in a flexible manner. PaperFold demonstrates how form could equal function in malleable mobile devices," Vertegaal said.
The PaperFold was unvieled at the ACM CHI 2014 conference in Toronto.
