The
brilliant dazzle of butterflies’ wings could hold
the key to a new type of optical material, called
photonic crystals. Over the past 15 years, photonic
crystals have attracted the attention of a vast international
community, as scientists have begun to realise their
potential applications in the field of optoelectronics
and telecommunications.
According to Dr Luca Plattner, who undertook research
in the School of Electronics and Computer Science
at the University of Southampton, our understanding
of the way that light is reflected from the wings
of butterflies could lead to the fabrication of new
photonic crystals.
Dr Plattner investigated the optical properties of
a periodic nanostructure found on the wings of a tropical
butterfly, Morpho rhetenor. Several decades of scientific
investigation had shown that understanding the source
of the butterfly’s dazzling blue coloration required
the use of the most advanced techniques employed in
optical engineering.
Dr Plattner’s study explored the remarkable properties
of the nanostructures and the physical mechanisms
that produce them, both experimentally through optical
measurements which complemented those reported by
other scientists, and theoretically via cutting-edge
simulation techniques developed for photonics. This
enabled him to fabricate optical structures inspired
by the butterfly microstructure using silicon-based
materials and processes that are common in microelectronics.
The
work was carried out under the supervision of Professor
Greg Parker.
‘The reason for studying the structure on the wings
of that particular butterfly was that it has strong
similarities to the photonic crystals already fabricated
in the ECS Microelectronics Research Group,’ said
Luca Plattner. ‘I was able to explore a biomimetic
process, one in which we can learn new lessons from
nature which are beneficial to both engineers and
entomologists.’
Dr Plattner’s work will be published in the first
print issue of the Royal Society’s Interface magazine,
due out on 22 November.
Notes
Dr Plattner’s thesis Optical properties of the
scales of Morpho rhetenor butterflies: theoretical
and experimental investigation of the back-scattering
of light in the visible spectrum is publicly available
at ECS (http://eprints.ecs.soton.ac.uk/10031/) at
the University of Southampton Libraries (http://www.library.soton.ac.uk),
at the British Library, London (http://catalogue.bl.uk),
and at the Library of the Swiss Federal Institute
of Technology, Zurich (http://www.nebis.ch/index_e.html).