Laser engineering of biomimetic surfaces
Emmanuel Stratakis,Emmanuel Stratakis,Jörn Bonse,Johannes Heitz,Jan Siegel,George D. Tsibidis,Evangelos Skoulas,Evangelos Skoulas,A. Papadopoulos,A. Papadopoulos,Alexandros Mimidis,Alexandros Mimidis,Anna-Christin Joel,Philipp Comanns,Jörg Krüger,Camilo Florian,Yasser Fuentes-Edfuf,Javier Solis,Werner Baumgartner +18 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the state of the art of laser processing methodologies for the fabrication of bioinspired artificial surfaces to realize extraordinary wetting, optical, mechanical, and biological-active properties for numerous applications is discussed.
read more
Abstract: The exciting properties of micro- and nano-patterned surfaces found in natural species hide a virtually endless potential of technological ideas, opening new opportunities for innovation and exploitation in materials science and engineering. Due to the diversity of biomimetic surface functionalities, inspirations from natural surfaces are interesting for a broad range of applications in engineering, including phenomena of adhesion, friction, wear, lubrication, wetting phenomena, self-cleaning, antifouling, antibacterial phenomena, thermoregulation and optics. Lasers are increasingly proving to be promising tools for the precise and controlled structuring of materials at micro- and nano-scales. When ultrashort-pulsed lasers are used, the optimal interplay between laser and material parameters enables structuring down to the nanometer scale. Besides this, a unique aspect of laser processing technology is the possibility for material modifications at multiple (hierarchical) length scales, leading to the complex biomimetic micro- and nano-scale patterns, while adding a new dimension to structure optimization. This article reviews the current state of the art of laser processing methodologies, which are being used for the fabrication of bioinspired artificial surfaces to realize extraordinary wetting, optical, mechanical, and biological-active properties for numerous applications. The innovative aspect of laser functionalized biomimetic surfaces for a wide variety of current and future applications is particularly demonstrated and discussed. The article concludes with illustrating the wealth of arising possibilities and the number of new laser micro/nano fabrication approaches for obtaining complex high-resolution features, which prescribe a future where control of structures and subsequent functionalities are beyond our current imagination.
read more
Chat with Paper
AI Agents for this Paper
Find similar papers on Google Scholar, PubMed and Arxiv
Write a critical review of this paper
Analyze citations of this paper to find unaddressed research gaps
Citations
Maxwell Meets Marangoni—A Review of Theories on Laser-Induced Periodic Surface Structures
Jörn Bonse,Stephan Gräf +1 more
TL;DR: In this paper, a review of the available literature on laser-induced periodic surface structures (LIPSS, ripples) along with their numerical implementations and a comparison and critical assessment of these approaches is provided.
Bactericidal effects of natural nanotopography of dragonfly wing on Escherichia coli
Chaturanga D. Bandara,Sanjleena Singh,Isaac O. Afara,Tuquabo Tesfamichael,Annalena Wolff,Kostya Ostrikov,Adekunle Oloyede +6 more
- 31 Jan 2017
TL;DR: The natural bactericidal interaction between E. coli and a dragonfly wing's (Orthetrum villosovittatum) NTS is revealed using advanced microscopy techniques and a model is proposed that suggests the bacterial membrane damage is initiated by a combination of strong adhesion between nanopillars and bacterium EPS layer as well as shear force when immobilized bacterium attempts to move on the NTS.
151
Quo Vadis LIPSS?—Recent and Future Trends on Laser-Induced Periodic Surface Structures
TL;DR: The footprint of the research area of LIPSS is analyzed on the basis of a detailed literature search, a brief overview on its current trends is provided, the European funding strategies within the Horizon 2020 programme are described, and promising future directions are outlined.
148
References
Laser-based biomimetic functionalization of surfaces: from moisture harvesting lizards to specific fluid transport systems
TL;DR: It is concluded that a biomimetic liquid transport can increase the product performance, improves product life time or saves resources.
High-Efficiency Waveguide Optical Amplifiers and Lasers via FS-Laser Induced Local Modification of the Glass Composition
Jesus del Hoyo,Pedro Moreno-Zarate,Geman Escalante,Juan A. Vallés,Paloma Fernández,Javier Solis +5 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors show the feasibility of producing active waveguides with different optical gains in the same phosphate glass sample by changing the laser writing parameters, which can similarly be used to produce high performance waveguide amplifiers and lasers.
Bioinspired polymer microstructures for directional transport of oily liquids.
Cristina Plamadeala,Florian Hischen,R. Friesenecker,Richard Wollhofen,Jaroslaw Jacak,Gerda Buchberger,Egon Heiss,Thomas A. Klar,Werner Baumgartner,Johannes Heitz +9 more
TL;DR: Arrays of drops looking like polymer microstructures produced by the two-photon polymerization technique that mimic the micro-ornamentation from the bug's cuticle are presented, showing good directionality of oil transport.
Bone‐forming cells with pronounced spread into the third dimension in polymer scaffolds fabricated by two‐photon polymerization
Johannes Heitz,Cristina Plamadeala,Moritz Wiesbauer,Peter Freudenthaler,Richard Wollhofen,Jaroslaw Jacak,Thomas A. Klar,B. Magnus,D. Köstner,Agnes Weth,Werner Baumgartner,R. Marksteiner +11 more
TL;DR: The main aim of this work was to stimulate bone‐forming cells to produce three‐dimensional networks of mineralized proteins such as those occurring in bones by a novel approach using a specific type of mesenchymal progenitor cells seeded on to polymer scaffolds.
Control of cultured human cells with femtosecond laser ablated patterns on steel and plastic surfaces.
TL;DR: Topographical patterns produced with femtosecond laser pulses as a means of controlling the behaviour of living human cells on stainless steel surfaces and on negative plastic imprints strongly affect cell behaviour and are particularly powerful in controlling cell spreading/elongation, localization and orientation.
Related Papers (5)
Emmanuel Stratakis,Emmanuel Stratakis,Jörn Bonse,Johannes Heitz,Jan Siegel,George D. Tsibidis,Evangelos Skoulas,Evangelos Skoulas,A. Papadopoulos,A. Papadopoulos,Alexandros Mimidis,Alexandros Mimidis,Anna-Christin Joel,Philipp Comanns,Jörg Krüger,Camilo Florian,Yasser Fuentes-Edfuf,Javier Solis,Werner Baumgartner +18 more
Mamoun Muhammed
- 01 Jan 2003