Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

How can mimicking an octopus help us stay warm?

- Washington Post

ENGINEER Alon Gorodetsky remembers the precise moment he decided to drop everything and start studying cephalopod­s. This class of sea animals includes squid, cuttlefish and octopuses.

“I saw this amazing video by (biologist) Roger Hanlon of an octopus suddenly appearing out of an algae-covered rock,” Gorodetsky says. The amazing now-you-don’tsee-it-now-you-do ability of the animal “made me think, I have to work on this”.

Ever since, Gorodetsky’s lab at the University of California at Irvine (UCI) has been trying to make what he calls “technologi­cally valuable things” based on cephalopod­s’ camouflagi­ng skills. They’ve succeeded in creating a material that will let people, not disguise themselves as rocks and algae, but regulate how warm or cool they feel. The UCI team built this material using biomimicry – watching how a biological organism behaves, then imitating it.

Cephalopod­s have a layer of skin that’s packed with pigment-containing cells called chromatoph­ores. When you can’t see the cephalopod, it’s expanding and contractin­g its chromatoph­ores between little upright points and big, flat disks.

The cephalopod changes how light is reflected off its skin. This lets it change its appearance. The UCI team used it as inspiratio­n to lay little pieces of copper tightly together on top of a rubber sheet.

When the sheet is relaxed, the copper absorbs and retains heat. When the sheet is stretched, the copper pieces are pulled apart so that spaces appear between them. Heat then escapes from those spaces.

It’s a simple process that could let people change their own temperatur­e rather than the temperatur­e of a room they’re sitting in – Gorodetsky imagines how this could help buildings save money and energy on heating and cooling. He points out that no two people experience hot and cold the same.

In addition to cephalopod­s, inspiratio­n for the material was from the original thin, metal-coated space blanket designed by NASA in the 1960s. It works well in one set of conditions – when you’re cold and need to warm up. But its properties are static, meaning they can’t change as conditions do. UCI’s material is dynamic – able to change to meet shifting needs; it can be stretched thousands of times without losing this ability.

The next step for Gorodetsky and the UCI team is figuring out how to put the material into Alon Gorodetsky, University of California at Irvine (UCI) associate professor of chemical and biomolecul­ar engineerin­g, and

Erica Leung, a UCI graduate student in that department, have invented a new material that can trap or release heat as desired.

PICTURE: STEVE ZYLIUS, UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA AT IRVINE actual fabric, then to create rolls of it that can be used to fashion shirts, sheets, tents and window-coverings.

“There’s a world of applicatio­ns for this material,” Gorodetsky says. “We just have to convince people to wear it and use it.”

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa