Superhydrophobic hierarchically structured surfaces in biology: Evolution, structural principles and biomimetic applications

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Abstract

A comprehensive survey of the construction principles and occurrences of superhydrophobic surfaces in plants, animals and other organisms is provided and is based on our own scanning electron microscopic examinations of almost 20 000 different species and the existing literature. Properties such as self-cleaning (lotus effect), fluid drag reduction (Salvinia effect) and the introduction of new functions (air layers as sensory systems) are described and biomimetic applications are discussed: self-cleaning is established, drag reduction becomes increasingly important, and novel air-retaining grid technology is introduced. Surprisingly, no evidence for lasting superhydrophobicity in non-biological surfaces exists (except technical materials). Phylogenetic trees indicate that superhydrophobicity evolved as a consequence of the conquest of land about 450 million years ago and may be a key innovation in the evolution of terrestrial life. The approximate 10 million extant species exhibit a stunning diversity of materials and structures, many of which are formed by self-assembly, and are solely based on a limited number of molecules. A short historical survey shows that bionics (today often called biomimetics) dates back more than 100 years. Statistical data.

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APA

Barthlott, W., Mail, M., & Neinhuis, C. (2016). Superhydrophobic hierarchically structured surfaces in biology: Evolution, structural principles and biomimetic applications. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A: Mathematical, Physical and Engineering Sciences, 374(2073). https://doi.org/10.1098/rsta.2016.0191

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