The scales of Morpho butterflies are covered with intricate, hierarchical ridge structures that produce a bright, blue reflection that remains stable across wide viewing angles. This effect has been researched extensively, and much understanding has been achieved using modeling that has focused on the positional disorder among the identical, multilayered ridges as the critical factor for producing angular independent color. Realizing such positional disorder of identical nanostructures is difficult, which in turn has limited experimental verification of different physical mechanisms that have been proposed. In this paper, we suggest an alternative model of inter-structural disorder that can achieve the same broad-angle color reflection, and is applicable to wafer-scale fabrication using conventional thin film technologies. Fabrication of a thin film that produces pure, stable blue across a viewing angle of more than 120 ° is demonstrated, together with a robust, conformal color coating.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/srep46023 | DOI Listing |
Nano Lett
August 2024
Department of Photonics, College of Electrical and Computer Engineering, National Yang Ming Chiao Tung University, Hsinchu 300093, Taiwan.
Nonlocal metasurfaces, exemplified by resonant waveguide gratings (RWGs), spatially and angularly configure optical wavefronts through narrow-band resonant modes, unlike the broad-band and broad-angle responses of local metasurfaces. However, forward design techniques for RWGs remain constrained at lower efficiency. Here, we present a topology-optimized metasurface resonant waveguide grating (MRWG) composed of titanium dioxide on a glass substrate capable of operating simultaneously at red, yellow, green, and blue wavelengths.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFACS Appl Mater Interfaces
July 2020
Department of Micro/Nano Systems, Korea University, 145 Anam-Ro, Seongbuk-Gu, Seoul 02841, Republic of Korea.
Aesthetically appealing photovoltaic (PV) panels with colorful layers are used in numerous applications involving color matching with the surroundings. To develop a colored film for a PV system, appropriate optical properties such as high transparency and low angle sensitivity are necessary because the colored layers can reduce the efficiency of the PV system by causing variations in the transmittance and angle of incidence. Herein, we propose a facile fabrication method for bioinspired three-dimensional (3D) photonic crystal (PC) films that exhibit broad angle-insensitive transmission and reflection, for application in colorful PV.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Rep
April 2017
Department of Physics, KAIST, 335 Gwahangno, Yuseong-Gu, Daejeon, Rep. of Korea.
The scales of Morpho butterflies are covered with intricate, hierarchical ridge structures that produce a bright, blue reflection that remains stable across wide viewing angles. This effect has been researched extensively, and much understanding has been achieved using modeling that has focused on the positional disorder among the identical, multilayered ridges as the critical factor for producing angular independent color. Realizing such positional disorder of identical nanostructures is difficult, which in turn has limited experimental verification of different physical mechanisms that have been proposed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe ordered, lamellae-structured ridges on the wing scales of Morpho butterflies give rise to their striking blue iridescence by multilayer interference and grating diffraction. At the same time, the random offsets among the ridges broaden the directional multilayer reflection peaks and the grating diffraction peaks that the color appears the same at various viewing angles, contrary to the very definition of iridescence. While the overall process is well understood, there has been little investigation into confirming the roles of each factor due to the difficulty of controllably reproducing such complex structures.
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