Submarines are now beginning to become common place and this
technology opens the door to near friction less operation in the
water, even if it is only applied to specialist surfaces as we see
holding true in nature. It becomes much easier to employ multiple
glide planes if friction is largely eliminated.
I can see a scenario in which the operator attaches such planes and
devices just before operation and removes them afterward to preserve
integrity.
I suspect it is now feasible to produce a submarine whose failure
modes all result in the vessel surfacing while providing comfort and
excellent vision to the occupants during operation on a near auto
pilot basis. From there mass production become plausible and low
costs possible.
A low friction capacity that is robust would make sub sea commuting a
possibility also and create a huge market.
Nature inspires new
submarine design
by Staff Writers
Beijing, China (SPX) Jun 20, 2012
The water boatman can
swim freely and breathe in water. The study showed that the
superhydrophobicity of the water boatman's hind wings plays a crucial
role in its swimming, breathing, and balance, as well as its ability
to escape from the water surface under unfavorable conditions.
Superhydrophobicity is
one of most important interfacial properties between solids and
liquids. SHI Yanlong and his group from the College of Chemistry and
Chemical Engineering, Key laboratory of Hexi Corridor Resources
Utilization of Gansu Universities, Hexi University investigated the
superhydrophobicity of the water boatman's hind wings.
The study showed that
superhydrophobicity plays a crucial role in the water boatman's
swimming, balance, and breathing in water, and in its escape ability
from water area under unfavorable conditions. Their work, entitled
"Investigation of superhydrophobicity on water boatman's hind
wings", was published in the Chinese Science Bulletin 2012, Vol
57 (14).
Recently, studies of
superhydrophobicity have attracted much interest because of its
potential practical applications. In nature, lotus leaves,
water-striders' legs, and some insects' wings exhibit perfect
superhydrophobicity.
Inspired by these
superhydrophobic characteristics within living organisms, scientists
have invented many ways to fabricate artificial superhydrophobic
materials.
Superhydrophobic
surfaces are commonly constructed either by creating
micro/nanostructures on hydrophobic substrates or by chemically
modifying micro/nanostructured surfaces with materials of low surface
free energy.
Research on
superhydrophobicity has seldom focused on insects that live in water.
In this report, the authors investigated the water-dwelling water
boatman, which belongs to the Corixidae family of the order
Hemiptera, suborder Heteroptera.
The water boatman can
swim freely and breathe in water. The study showed that the
superhydrophobicity of the water boatman's hind wings plays a crucial
role in its swimming, breathing, and balance, as well as its ability
to escape from the water surface under unfavorable conditions.
The water boatman's
metapodia are quant-like and keep swinging while it swims;
counterforces between the metapodia and water push the water boatman
forward or downward. When the metapodia stop swinging, its body
begins to float upward because of the buoyancy induced by the perfect
superhydrophobicity of the water boatman's hind wings.
Superhydrophobic
surfaces are usually induced because of the synergistic effects of
hierarchical micro/nanoscale binary structures and low surface free
energy. Scanning-electron microscopy studies of the micro/nanoscale
structure revealed that the surface of the water boatman's hind wings
is composed of mastoids and nanorods with diameters of about 80nm and
50-100nm, with typical mastoid-to-mastoid and rod-to-rod distances of
about 50-200nm and 300-1000nm, respectively.
Moreover, the insect's
wing surface contains low surface energy protein, lipid, and chitin
materials, which are hydrophobic. The superhydrophobicity of the
water boatman's hind wings is presumed to originate from the
combination of such a hierarchical surface structure together with
hydrophobic materials contained on the wing. Water contact angles on
the wing surface were measured to be 159 degrees and the glide angle
was about 8 degrees.
According to Cassie's
theory, contact between water droplets and the water boatman's hind
wings is a composite contact of solid-liquid-gas. On the rough
hierarchical surface, air can be trapped within the micro/nanoscale
structures on the wing surface, which makes it difficult for water to
enter into the structures to fully wet the surface.
The overall contact
area between water droplets and air trapped within the
micro/nanoscale structures can be roughly estimated to be about 9%
(the corresponding contact area between water drops and solid wing
surface is about 91%).
The
superhydrophobicity of the water boatman's hind wings enables it to
swim freely, breathe in water with the assistance of air trapped on
its hind wings' surfaces, and escape easily from water area under
unfavorable conditions without being affected by moisture.
This research may
provide a new strategy for submarine design and the fabrication of a
water boatman robot which could swim in water and walk on water
surface. Water boatman robots with strong wave resistance and high
walking stability on water could be outfitted with miniature
biochemical sensors , the biomimetic boatman robots may be used to
monitor chemicals at water area for environmental monitoring and
cleaning applications, and can be teleoperated or controlled
autonomously.
Wang Y S, Shi Y L,
Feng X J, et al. Investigation of superhydrophobicity on water
boatman's hind wings (in Chinese). Chin Sci Bull (ChinVer),
2012,57:1227-1230, doi: 10.1360/972011-2636.
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