Scientists using butterfly wings to develop self-cleaning windows
Melbourne, Dec 10 : French scientists are trying to develop self-cleaning windows and windshields – with the help of butterfly wings.
Butterfly wings – and lotus leaves – can repel water with ease because of the microstructures on their surface.
The waffle-like structures found on butterfly wings can make it difficult for water droplets to spread out.
In a bid to develop self-cleaning windows and windshields, Christophe Peroz at the French National Centre for Scientific Research in Aubervilliers has developed a quicker and cheaper technique to reproduce the microstructures on butterfly wings, which repel water and dirt.
The technique involves pouring a silicon-based polymer liquid over an actual wing or leaf and leaving it to dry, reports News. com. au
They then peeled off the solid polymer and used it as a mould for methyltriethoxysilane (MTEOS) - an agent used in glass-making.
It can be changed from a liquid to a gel by spinning it. The MTEOS is later poured onto the mould and spun, forming a 900-nanometre-thick film.
Many such films can be combined to create a large water-repellent surface for a window. (ANI)