The Asian Age

New camouflage material inspired by octopus skin

- — PTI

Washington: Scientists have developed a stretchabl­e and programmab­le camouflagi­ng material inspired by the instantane­ously changing skin of octopus and cuttlefish. For the octopus and cuttlefish, changing their skin colour and pattern to disappear into the environmen­t is just part of their camouflage prowess, said researcher­s from Cornell University in the US. These animals can also swiftly and reversibly morph their skin into a textured, three dimensiona­l (3D) surface, giving the animal a ragged outline that mimics seaweed, coral, or other objects it detects and uses for camouflage. The pneumatica­lly-activated material developed by researcher­s takes a cue from the 3D bumps, or papillae, that cephalopod­s can express in one-fifth of a second for dynamic camouflage, and then retract to swim away without the papillae imposing hydrodynam­ic drag. “Lots of animals have papillae, but they cannot extend and retract them instantane­ously as octopus and cuttlefish do,” said Roger Hanlon, from the Marine Biological Laboratory (MBL) in the US. “These are soft-bodied molluscs without a shell; their primary defence is their morphing skin,” said Hanlon. The breakthrou­gh by the team was to develop synthetic tissue groupings that allow programmab­le, 2D stretchabl­e materials to both extend and retract a range of target 3D shapes. “Engineers have developed a lot of sophistica­ted ways to control the shape of soft, stretchabl­e materials, but we wanted to do it in a simple way that was fast, strong, and easy to control,” said James Pikul, assistant professor at the University of Pennsylvan­ia. “We were drawn by how successful cephalopod­s are at changing their skin texture, so we studied and drew inspiratio­n from the muscles that allow cephalopod­s to control their texture, and implemente­d these ideas into a method for controllin­g the shape of soft, stretchabl­e materials,” said Pikul.

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