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| The structure of the surface of its wings gives the morpho butterfly its blue color. Credit: Pixabay, Garoch |
Using laser radiation, researchers can print tiny structures with the highest precision. A method to imitate the superpowers of animals and plants and to make them accessible to technology.
In order to survive even in extreme habitats, many animals and plants have developed skills in the course of evolution that are only known from superheroes from films. They are mostly based on the extraordinary properties of their surfaces. The imitation of these properties holds great potential for technology to develop new products or to solve technical problems. A research team from Bochum and Kiel has succeeded in imitating the structural color of the famous blue Morpho butterflies using high-precision 3D printing technology. The researchers report on their findings on the so-called two-photon polymerization, or 2PP for short, in the Journal of Optical Microsystems from 2nd. September 2022.
Researchers from the Chair of Laser Application Technology at the Ruhr University Bochum (RUB) led by Prof. Dr. Andreas Ostendorf and Prof. Dr. Cemal Esen and the working group "Functional Morphology and Biomechanics" of the Christian-Albrechts-University in Kiel (CAU) by Prof. Dr. Stanislav Gorb involved.









