| Skip to main content | Skip to sub navigation |

This is now an inactive research group it's members have moved on. You can find them at their new research groups:

ECS Intranet:
Biomimetically Inspired Nano-photonics


Structural blackness with applications in stealth technology as incorporated into a butterfly wing.
Pinwheel and Sunflower photonic quasicrystals displaying infinite rotational symmetry

Over 500 million years of evolution have created highly optimised optical solutions for the survival of the species. By definition the optical devices created are fabricated in organic materials, so further optimisation is possible by utilising materials that cannot be incorporated by living systems. Our research searches the living world for innovative optical designs and then analyses Nature's solution to a particular optical problem. Nature's solution is then modelled and improved by a combination of incorporating advanced materials and evolutionary algorithms (which take Nature's current day solution further into the future). As an example of the practical application of this research, a study of the structural colour produced by the Morpho Rhetenor butterfly wing led to the creation of a new type of photonic crystal structure for which a Patent has been granted.

Type: Postgraduate Research
Research Groups: Nano Research Group, Southampton Nanofabrication Centre
Themes: Nanophotonics and Biomimetics, Biomimetics
Dates: 10th October 2006 to 9th October 2009

Keywords

Funding

Principal Investigators

Other Investigators

URI: http://id.ecs.soton.ac.uk/project/649
RDF: http://rdf.ecs.soton.ac.uk/project/649

More information

You can edit the record for this project by visiting http://secure.ecs.soton.ac.uk/db/projects/editproj.php?project=649