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BUTTERFLIES’ WINGS DAZZLE WITH SCIENCE
04 November 2004 - University of Southampton Electronics and Computer Science

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.

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.

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).

http://www.micro.ecs.soton.ac.uk/

About: University of Southampton Electronics and Computer Science
The University of Southampton is a leading UK teaching and research institution with a global reputation for leading-edge research and scholarship. The University has over 19,200 students and over 4,800 staff. Its annual turnover is in the region of £250 million.

The School of Electronics and Computer Science at Southampton is a world-leading centre of excellence for research, teaching, enterprise and innovation in Computer Science, Electronics and Electrical Engineering.

The Schools distinguished history dates from 1947 when the UKs first Department of Electronics was opened in Southampton. Since then it has encompassed both Computer Science and Electrical Engineering and grown steadily in scale and in reputation.

Now one of the largest schools of its kind in the world, with more than 220 academic and research staff, and over 1000 students, it has an unparalleled reputation for the quality of its teaching and degree programmes, as much as for its contribution at the leading edge of research and new technology.

ECS houses the Microelectronics Research Group, a comprehensive integrated circuit and device fabrication facility which is currently supported by the Engineering and Physical Science Research Council (EPSRC) as a National Central Facility. The Microelectronics Research Group was founded circa 1970 with the setting up of the Southampton University Microelectronics Centre (SUMC).


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