Liquid–liquid phase separation morphologies in ultra-white beetle scales and a synthetic equivalent
Cyphochilus beetle scales are amongst the brightest structural whites in nature, being highly opacifying whilst extremely thin. However, the formation mechanism for the voided intra-scale structure is unknown. Here we report 3D x-ray nanotomography data for the voided chitin networks of intact white...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Communications chemistry 2019-08, Vol.2 (1), Article 100 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Cyphochilus
beetle scales are amongst the brightest structural whites in nature, being highly opacifying whilst extremely thin. However, the formation mechanism for the voided intra-scale structure is unknown. Here we report 3D x-ray nanotomography data for the voided chitin networks of intact white scales of
Cyphochilus
and
Lepidiota stigma
. Chitin-filling fractions are found to be 31 ± 2% for
Cyphochilus
and 34 ± 1% for
Lepidiota stigma
, indicating previous measurements overestimated their density. Optical simulations using finite-difference time domain for the chitin morphologies and simulated Cahn-Hilliard spinodal structures show excellent agreement. Reflectance curves spanning filling fraction of 5-95% for simulated spinodal structures, pinpoint optimal whiteness for 25% chitin filling. We make a simulacrum from a polymer undergoing a strong solvent quench, resulting in highly reflective (~94%) white films. In-situ X-ray scattering confirms the nanostructure is formed through spinodal decomposition phase separation. We conclude that the ultra-white beetle scale nanostructure is made via liquid–liquid phase separation.
White beetle scales strongly scatter white light, whilst being very thin. Here, the authors measured the internal scale nanostructure for the beetles,
Cyphochilus
and
L. stigma
, and demonstrate that the optical structure can be simulated using liquid–liquid phase separation nanostructures, pointing to this as the formation mechanism. |
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ISSN: | 2399-3669 2399-3669 |
DOI: | 10.1038/s42004-019-0202-8 |