Discovery of the surface polarity gradient on iridescent Morpho butterfly scales reveals a mechanism of their selective vapor response

Significance Morpho butterflies are a brilliant spectacle of nature’s capability for photonic engineering. Their conspicuous appearance arises from the interference and diffraction of light within tree-like nanostructures on their scales. Scientific lessons learned from these butterflies have already inspired designs of new displays, fabrics, and cosmetics. This study reports a vertical surface polarity gradient in these tree-like structures. This biological pattern design may be applied to numerous technological applications ranging from security tags to self-cleaning surfaces, gas separators, protective clothing, and sensors. Here it has allowed us to unveil a general mechanism of selective vapor response in photonic Morpho nanostructures and to demonstrate attractive opportunities for chemically graded sensing units for high-performance sensing. For almost a century, the iridescence of tropical Morpho butterfly scales has been known to originate from 3D vertical ridge structures of stacked periodic layers of cuticle separated by air gaps. Here we describe a biological pattern of surface functionality that we have found in these photonic structures. This pattern is a gradient of surface polarity of the ridge structures that runs from their polar tops to their less-polar bottoms. This finding shows a biological pattern design that could stimulate numerous technological applications ranging from photonic security tags to self-cleaning surfaces, gas separators, protective clothing, sensors, and many others. As an important first step, this biomaterial property and our knowledge of its basis has allowed us to unveil a general mechanism of selective vapor response observed in the photonic Morpho nanostructures. This mechanism of selective vapor response brings a multivariable perspective for sensing, where selectivity is achieved within a single chemically graded nanostructured sensing unit, rather than from an array of separate sensors.

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