Biomimetics: from natural sharkskin to
3D artificial sharkskin. Credit: J. E. Park et al., Adv. Mater. 35, 2309518
(2023)
Sharks
in nature swim at high speeds in a deep ocean due to their high drag reduction
ability. Water flows around the sharkskin become disrupted by staggered
and overlapping microscale structures named denticles. In addition to this
surface roughness, water slips at a fluid-solid interface with multiple
groove-like microriblets on individual microdenticles.
Furthermore,
the sharkskin exhibits high penetration resistance because of its quad-layered
structure from enamel to dermis. There are hard-on-soft layered mechanical
gradients from the outside to the inside of the sharkskin.
This
unique and functional sharkskin found in nature motivates this study, published
in Advanced Materials, the first to
microfabricate three-dimensional (3D) overlapped microdenticles with sharp
microriblets. The 3D artificial sharkskin was able to achieve multiple
functionalities by mimicking morphological and material characteristics of the
natural sharkskin.
Many
previous studies have been conducted to develop artificial sharkskin that
mimics natural sharkskin with functional advantages. However, it has been
difficult to form 3D overlapping morphology while maintaining the shape of
microriblets on the microdenticles. Undesired thermal deformation continues to
be an issue for the polymer-based microdenticles periodically arranged with
narrow interspacing.
To
solve this problem, Wie and his colleagues fabricated riblet-textured
microdenticles using a composite of magnetic particles and elastomeric
polymers. Next, 3D microdenticles were induced to bend until they overlapped
each other under an external magnetic field.
While
an interesting concept, there is a need to shape-fix this magnetic overlapping
to functionalize sharkskin under the removal of the magnetic field. "We
newly developed a chemical shape-fixation strategy to fabricate 3D
staggered-overlapped sharkskin," said Jeong Jae Wie, a professor in the
Department of Organic and Nano Engineering at Hanyang University.
"The microdenticles need to be actuated in reverse direction to coat a thin layer of a liquid resin of polymer on the sharkskin. After changing actuation in a forward direction, a thin polymer layer is cured, completing microfabrication of 3D artificial sharkskin with immobilized magnetic overlapping," said Jeong Eun Park, a first author in the published study.
Electrically Conductive 3D Sharkskin,
Microfabricated using Magnetic Actuations. Credit: Hanyang University.
"A unique point of this work
is the ability of their 3D artificial sharkskin to demonstrate multiple
functionalities while other studies have only been able to document one or two
features," said Wie's collaborator, Seung Goo Lee of University of Ulsan.
The research team first showed drag
reduction, a representative functionality of natural sharkskin. 3D artificial
sharkskin with hydrophobicity reduces drag when water flows in the frontal
direction of the microriblets.
"In our hydrophobic sharkskin,
micro-sized air bubbles are trapped among overlapped microdenticles, causing
slip of water layer on the air bubbles," added Wie's collaborator, Rhokyun
Kwak of Hanyang University.
In addition to this drag reduction
functionality, their 3D artificial sharkskin exhibits low friction when
scratching sample in the frontal direction and high mechanical robustness with
structural recovery, owing to the architecture of staggered-overlapped
microdenticles.
"Interestingly, these
functionalities could be improved by coating the mechanically soft
polymer-based sharkskin with nanoscale thin layer of mechanically brittle
material. This concept is motivated by the hard-on-soft layered structure of
the natural sharkskin," added Wie.
"Typically, mechanically soft
film has high surface friction against contact with surrounding obstacles.
However, in this work, the coefficient of friction decreases when coating
sharkskin with a thin ceramic because hard and flexible characteristics coexist
on this tri-layered sharkskin," explained Wie's collaborator, Sanha Kim of
Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology.
Subsequently, Wie's team coated the
tri-layered sharkskin with a thin metal. In a test of indentation, quad-layered
sharkskin exhibited enhanced hardness and recoverable work, when compared to
the noncoated polymeric sharkskin. Especially in the feature of structural
recovery, "Recoverable work can be stored in the bent microdenticles while
the thin layers of mechanically brittle materials may enhance the elastic
strain energy of the 3D artificial sharkskin," added Kim.
Furthermore, for microtextured
electronic applications, when the polymer-based sharkskin is coated with an
electrically conductive MXene material, it has a low electrical resistance of
5.3 Ω.
"MXene-coated sharkskin
enables joule heating with high temperature even when a low voltage is applied
(e.g., 230°C at 2.75 V). In addition, because of the hydrophilicity of MXene
material, wetting properties of sharkskin also changes from hydrophobic to
hydrophilic," said Wie's collaborator, Tae Hee Han of Hanyang University.
"This research is the first to
report on multiple functionalities demonstrable by the 3D artificial sharkskin,
with many potential applications in a variety of fields," said Lee. For
example, if the technology of this multifunctional artificial sharkskin was to
be utilized in the shipping industry, economic efficiency could be generated by reducing
fuel consumption and increasing the service life of the ship.
"As for future applications, ships with our 3D artificial sharkskin can be expected to fast navigate with reduced drag, less friction in contact with surrounding obstacles, and less damage from external impacts in the ocean," added Wie.
Source: A new microfabrication strategy for multifunctional 3D artificial sharkskin (phys.org)
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