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Fly eye inspires biomimetic surfaces for solar cell production

By | July 28, 2010, 11:25 AM PDT

While Akhlesh Lakhtakia was growing up in India, he tried to kill flies with his hands.

He blamed his inability to catch the flies on the fact that he had small hands. But he knew that the flies could see him much better than he could see them.

Flies can see your hand coming. Their big eyes are positioned on their head, in a way that let’s them see 270 degrees around them. Without a fly swatter, Lakhtakia didn’t stand a chance.

“I thought about those things back then,” he says.

He still does.

A few years ago, when Lakhtakia was in his lab at Penn State University, he was trying to figure out how to decorate a solar cell that captures light from the side to increase the efficiency of the cell. He thought, well flies do it.

“So we chose the eyes of flies,” Lakhtakia says.

The engineering professor has created the first industrial way to pattern solar cells using the eyes of flies. “I’m not saying this will happen tomorrow, but it’s in the realm of industrial possibility,” he says.

Lakhtakia’s grad student had the pleasure of getting the experiment started. The student left a piece of liver outside, and before long, flies swarmed around the meat. The flies were caught with a net and taken inside the lab. Killed with ethanol, the flies were ready for their heads to be chopped off and their eyes separated for good. The eyes were mounted on a glass slide.

Then, inside a vapor deposition chamber, evaporated nickel formed a thin film on top of the eyes. The resulting film was 250 nanometers thick (or thinner than your hair). To get the film to an ideal thickness of half a millimeter thick, the student dipped the slide into an electrolyte solution to allow the nickel ions to accumulate on top of the surface.

Then the student washed the solution off and threw away the glass slide.

“Remove the eyes and you are left with the impression of the eyes on the nickel surface. It’s a cast. Then you put a polymer inside of it and the polymer will acquire the shape of the eyes. This way, you can make replicas of the eyes,” he says.

Bioreplication is less than 10 years old — no one has figured out a way to automate the process. For now, it’s done the hard by — by hand.

“You could make one copy of it from the original. Doing that on an industrial scale would deplete the natural source. Even if people don’t like flies, it’s still not a good idea [to use a fly for every copy],” Lakhtakia says.

We have to work on automating the process, he says. But this will take us a few years.

Lakhtakia is using similar techniques to create colored surfaces. That way, fabrics like bed sheets could have pretty colors because of their structure. Things can have colors in other ways than slopping paint on them. The method could also be used to solve crimes. Normally fingerprints on things like Wal-Mart bags are difficult to read, but Lakhtakia’s patterning technique can read those hard-to-read surfaces.

But Lakhtakia’s immediate attention is on scaling up his method of patterning solar cells with the eyes of a fly.

“Have you tried to swat a fly? I doubt it, unless you are quick like Bruce Lee,” he jokes.

Well, clearly the professor hasn’t seen this video of President Obama swatting a sucker during an interview:

Photo Credit: Akhlesh Lakhtakia, Penn State

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Boonsri Dickinson

About Boonsri Dickinson

Boonsri Dickinson was a contributing editor for SmartPlanet from 2010 to 2012.

Boonsri Dickinson

Boonsri Dickinson

Contributing Editor

Boonsri Dickinson is a freelance journalist based in San Francisco. She has written for Discover, The Huffington Post, Forbes, Nature Biotech, Technewsdaily.com, Techstartups.com and AOL. She's currently a reporter for Business Insider. She holds degrees from the University of Florida and the University of Colorado at Boulder.

Follow her on Twitter.

Boonsri Dickinson

Boonsri Dickinson

In the unlikely event that Boonsri has a professional or financial relationship with a company she writes about, it will be prominently disclosed.

She writes for SmartPlanet and is not an employee of CBS.

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RE: Fly eye inspires biomimetic surfaces for solar cell production
Did you get your "q" and "w" keys mixed up. I've always called it fly swatting, not squatting.
Posted by riverat1
29th Jul 2010
0 Votes
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Where's the beef?
Moulding a pattern off an insect's eye is interesting in and of itself, I agree, but the headline mentions solar cells. So what did this do for the solar cells?
Posted by georg.nissen
29th Jul 2010
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RE: Fly eye inspires biomimetic surfaces for solar cell production
I think that the application of this tech to solar cells is that they will be able to be static & still absorb the max possible quantity of light energy rather than being pointed toward the sun as the day goes by & the seasons change. I'm certain that we should be told instead of having to guess. I also don't understand why the fly eye can't be scanned & analyzed by computer for replication.
Posted by hoodedswan
30th Jul 2010
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RE: Fly eye inspires biomimetic surfaces for solar cell production
I certainly hope that English is your second language. In any case, either hire a better editor or take an English class. You might also try blogging on a subject that you can understand in order to ask more pertinent questions.
Posted by rwatters@...
30th Jul 2010
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RE: Fly eye inspires biomimetic surfaces for solar cell production
BY DESTROYING NATURE
By destroying nature, environment, man is committing matricide, having in a way killed Mother Earth. Technological excellence, growth of industries, economical gains have led to depletion of natural resources irreversibly. Indifference of the grave consequences, lack of concern and foresight have contributed in large measures to the alarming position. In the case at hand, the alleged victim is the flora and fauna in and around Kudremukh National Park, a part of the Western Gates. The forests in the area are among 18 immediately recognized ?Hotspots? for bio-diversity conservation in the world.
Posted by yogeshsaxena
30th Jul 2010
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