裏庭の昆虫が透明化装置や次世代技術にヒントを与える(Backyard insect inspires invisibility devices, next gen tech)

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2024-03-18 ペンシルベニア州立大学(PennState)

ペンシルベニア州立大学の研究によると、庭の共通の昆虫であるリーフホッパーは、微小な謎めいた粒子を分泌し、身を包んでおり、次世代技術のインスピレーションと指針を提供する可能性がある。これらの粒子の幾何学を正確に再現し、可視光と紫外線光の両方を吸収する仕組みを解明することで、バイオインスパイアされた光学材料の開発が可能になるという。研究者は、リーフホッパーの粒子が光を特定の方法で制御するのを初めて観察し、光反射を最大94%まで減少させることができることを発見した。これにより、太陽エネルギーの効率的な収集や透明なクロークの開発など、さまざまな応用が考えられる。

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反射防止性ヨコバイのブロホソームの幾何学的デザイン Geometric design of antireflective leafhopper brochosomes

Lin Wang, Zhuo Li, Sheng Shen, and Tak-Sing Wong
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences  Published:March 18, 2024
DOI:https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2312700121

Significance

Many natural functional materials comprise hierarchical micro- and nanostructures that are integral parts of biological surfaces. Distinctively, leafhoppers excrete brochosomes and actively use them as deployable materials on their body surfaces. Brochosomes are hollow, buckyball-shaped nanoscopic spheroids with through-holes on their surfaces. Since their discovery in the 1950s, understanding the functional significance of brochosomal geometry has remained elusive. Here, we demonstrate that the geometry and the through-hole design of brochosomes effectively reduce light reflection. Furthermore, brochosomes are a biological example exhibiting short-wavelength, low-pass filter functionality. The unique geometry of brochosomes provides a distinct approach for bioinspired optical manipulation. This represents a development distinct from the antireflective moth-eye effect (1973) and offers insight for engineering deployable optical materials.

Abstract

In nature, leafhoppers cover their body surfaces with brochosomes as a protective coating. These leafhopper-produced brochosomes are hollow, buckyball-shaped, nanoscopic spheroids with through-holes distributed across their surfaces, representing a class of deployable optical materials that are rare in nature. Despite their discovery in the 1950s, it remains unknown why the sizes of brochosomes and their through-holes consistently fall within the range of hundreds of nanometers across different leafhopper species. Here, we demonstrate that the hierarchical geometries of brochosomes are engineered within a narrow size range with through-hole architecture to significantly reduce light reflection. By utilizing two-photon polymerization three-dimensional printing to fabricate high-fidelity synthetic brochosomes, we investigated the optical form-to-function relationship of brochosomes. Our results show that the diameters of brochosomes are engineered within a specific size range to maximize broadband light scattering, while the secondary through-holes are designed to function as short-wavelength, low-pass filters, further reducing light reflection. These synergistic effects enable brochosomes to achieve a substantial reduction in specular reflection, by up to approximately 80 to 94%, across a broadband wavelength range. Importantly, brochosomes represent a biological example demonstrating short-wavelength, low-pass filter functionality. Furthermore, our results indicate that the geometries of natural brochosomes may have evolved to effectively reduce reflection from ultraviolet to visible light, thereby enabling leafhoppers to evade predators whose vision spectrum encompasses both ultraviolet and visible light. Our findings offer key design insights into a class of deployable bioinspired optical materials with potential applications in omnidirectional antireflection coatings, optical encryption, and multispectral camouflage.

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