Reconfigurable
Micro- and Nano-Structured Camouflage
Surfaces Inspired by Cephalopods
Posted on 2021-10-11 - 14:48
Wrinkled
surfaces and materials are found throughout the natural
world in various plants and animals and are known to improve the performance
of emerging optical and electrical technologies. Despite much progress,
the reversible post-fabrication tuning of wrinkle sizes and geometries
across multiple length scales has remained relatively challenging
for some materials, and the development of comprehensive structure–function
relationships for optically active wrinkled surfaces has often proven
difficult. Herein, by drawing inspiration from natural cephalopod
skin and leveraging methodologies established for artificial adaptive
infrared platforms, we engineer systems with hierarchically reconfigurable
wrinkled surface morphologies and dynamically tunable visible-to-infrared
spectroscopic properties. Specifically, we demonstrate architectures
for which mechanical actuation changes the surface morphological characteristics;
modulates the reflectance, transmittance, and absorptance across a
broad spectral window; controls the specular-to-diffuse reflectance
ratios; and alters the visible and thermal appearances. Moreover,
we demonstrate the incorporation of these architectures into analogous
electrically actuated appearance-changing devices that feature competitive
figures of merit, such as reasonable maximum areal strains, rapid
response times, and good stabilities upon repeated actuation. Overall,
our findings constitute another step forward in the continued development
of cephalopod-inspired light- and heat-manipulating systems and may
facilitate advanced applications in the areas of sensing, electronics,
optics, soft robotics, and thermal management.
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Liu, Yinuan; Feng, Zhijing; Xu, Chengyi; Chatterjee, Atrouli; Gorodetsky, Alon A. (2021). Reconfigurable
Micro- and Nano-Structured Camouflage
Surfaces Inspired by Cephalopods. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/acsnano.0c09990