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To sense dangerous chemical threats, Darpa looks to the butterfly

By | August 12, 2010, 10:12 PM PDT

Sometimes, you just can’t beat nature.

That’s the lesson learned by Darpa, which has decided to grant $6.3 million to a group led by GE Global Research that’s looking to the humble butterfly for inspiration. This group is seeking a new, better sensor to detect chemical threats.

Current nano-engineered photonic sensors, though they can sense individual chemicals, have a major problem, according to Wired: Their results become unreliable with interference. And interestingly, the answer to that problem might be found in the peculiar structure of the minute scales on a butterfly’s wing.

Those scales, only 50-100 microns each, “change spectral reflectivity depending on the exposure of the scales to different vapors.” There’s one specific type of butterfly that’s being analyzed for this use: the Morpho, a not-unfamiliar iridescent blue variety native to the Americas, as far north as Mexico. And the Morpho is a very special butterfly indeed: its scales “dramatically outperform” existing artificial sensors.

These scales are able to detect certain types of chemical weapons or explosives, even in areas of high humidity (humidity being one of the biggest stumbling blocks for artificial sensors). The team aims to create sensors inspired by these butterfly scales, about 1cm square, to be used in both military and civilian circumstances (Wired names food safety and water purification).

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Dan Nosowitz

About Dan Nosowitz

Dan Nosowtiz was a contributing editor for SmartPlanet in 2010.

Dan Nosowitz

Dan Nosowitz

Contributing Editor, Technology

Dan Nosowitz has written for Popular Science, Fast Company and Gizmodo. He holds a degree from McGill University in Canada. He is based in New York.

Follow him on Twitter.

Dan Nosowitz

Dan Nosowitz

Dan Nosowitz does not hold any investments in the technology companies he covers.

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

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RE: To sense dangerous chemical threats, Darpa looks to the butterfly
It's DARPA, an acronym for Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency; not Darpa.
Posted by TaDaH
13th Aug 2010
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Schooled!
Yet again, we got schooled by something we find in nature.

Cool.
Posted by GuntherGump
13th Aug 2010
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