The Nokia Morph is a concept of mobile phone created by the Finnish company Nokia. The concept, which was presented on February 25, 2008 at the Museum of Modern Art in New York City, was the product of a joint study on the future of mobile phones by the Nokia Research Center and the Nanoscience Center of the University of Cambridge. The device was presented as part of the museum's exhibition "Design and the Elastic Mind". According to Bob Iannucci, Nokia's chief technology officer, "Nokia Research Center is looking for ways to reinvent the form and function of mobile devices ... The Morph concept shows what might be possible."
The device, which is not functional, is intended to provide a conceptual showcase for future applications of nanotechnology in the field of consumer electronics. List of theoretical features of the phone would include the ability to fold in numerous forms, so that it can be worn around the wrist or held up to the face, transparent electronics, which would allow the device to be transparent but functional; self-cleaning surfaces that can absorb solar energy to recharge the phone's battery; and a wide range of fully integrated sensors. Nokia launched a computer-generated video demonstrating the capabilities that the Morph could have if it were a real mobile phone. The manufacturer believed that some of the device's imagined features could appear on high-end devices before 2015.