Chameleon inspires ‘smart skin’ that changes color in the sun
A chameleon can alter the color of its skin so it either blends into the background
to hide or stands out to defend its territory and attract a mate. The chameleon
makes this trick look easy, using photonic crystals in its skin. Scientists,
however, have struggled to make a photonic crystal “smart skin” that changes
color in response to the environment, without also changing in size.
The journal ACS
Nano is publishing research led by chemists at Emory
University that found a solution to the problem. They developed a flexible
smart skin that reacts to heat and sunlight while maintaining a near constant
volume.
“Watching a chameleon change colors gave me the idea for the breakthrough,”
says first author Yixiao Dong, a PhD candidate in Emory’s Department of
Chemistry. “We’ve developed a new concept for a color-changing smart skin, based
on observations of how nature does it.”
“Scientists in the field of photonic crystals have been working for a long
time to try to create color-changing smart skins for a range of potential
applications, such as camouflage, chemical sensing and anti-counterfeiting
tags, ” adds Khalid Salaita, senior author of the paper and an Emory professor
of chemistry. “While our work is still in the fundamental stages, we’ve
established the principles for a new approach to explore and build upon.”
Besides chameleons, many other creatures have evolved the ability to change
color. The stripes on a neon tetra fish, for example, turn from deep indigo to
blue-green when they swim into sunlight.
The coloration in these organisms is not based on pigments, but on tiny
particles in a repeating pattern, known as photonic crystals. The periodicity
in these particles causes the material to interfere with wavelengths of light.
Although the particles themselves are colorless, the precise spacing between
them allows certain light waves to pass through them while rejecting others.
The visible colors produced change depending on factors such as lighting
conditions or shifts in the distance between the particles. The iridescence of
some butterfly wings and the feathers of peacocks are among many other examples
of photonic crystals in nature.
If you put strawberries into a blender, Dong explains, the resulting liquid
will be red because the color of the strawberries comes from pigment. If you
grind up iridescent butterfly wings, however, the result will be a dull powder
because the rainbow colors were not based on pigments, but on what is known as
“structural color.” The structure of the photonic crystal arrays is destroyed
when the butterfly wings are ground up.
To mimic chameleons and create an artificial smart skin, scientists have
experimented with embedding photonic crystal arrays into flexible,
water-containing polymers, or hydrogels. Expanding or contracting the hydrogel
changes the spacing between the arrays, resulting in a color change. The
problem, however, is that the accordion-like action needed to generate a
visible change in hue causes the hydrogel to significantly grow or shrink in
size, leading to structural instability and buckling of the material.
“No one wants a camouflage cloak that shrinks to change color,” Salaita
notes.
Dong was pondering the problem while watching YouTube videos of a
chameleon. “I wanted to understand why a chameleon doesn’t get bigger or
smaller as it changes color, but remains its original size,” he says.
In close-up, time-lapsed images of the chameleon changing hues, Dong
noticed that the arrays of photonic crystals did not cover the entire skin but
were spread out within a dark matrix. As the photonic crystals turned different
colors, these patches of color remained the same distance apart. Dong
hypothesized that the skin cells making up the dark matrix somehow adjusted to
compensate for the shifts in the photonic crystals.
“I wondered if we could design something similar — a composite structure of
photonic crystal arrays embedded into a strain-accommodating matrix,” Dong
says.
The researchers used magnets to arrange patterns of photonic crystals
containing iron oxide within a hydrogel. They then embedded these arrays into a
second, non-color-changing hydrogel. The second, springy hydrogel was
mechanically matched to the first hydrogel to compensate for shifts in
distances between the photonic crystals. When heated, this strain-accommodating
smart skin (SASS) changes color but maintains a near-constant size.
Dong also tested the material in sunlight, fabricating SASS films into the
shape of a fish, in homage to the neon tetra, as well as into the shape of a
leaf. When exposed to natural sunlight for 10 minutes, the SASS films shifted
from orange to green, without changing in size.
“We’ve provided a general framework to guide the future design of
artificial smart skins,” Dong says. “There is still a long way to go for
real-life applications, but it’s exciting to push the field another step
further.”
Journal article: https://pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/acsnano.9b04231
Source: http://www.emory.edu/home/index.html
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