Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1428782 Materials Science and Engineering: C 2014 6 Pages PDF
Abstract

•We report optical gas sensing on blue butterfly wing scale nanostructures.•The sample temperature decrease effects a reversible break-down in the measured spectra.•The break-down is connected with the vapor condensation in the scales and wing surface.•Capillary condensation occurs in the wing scales.

The sensing of gasses/vapors in the ambient air is the focus of attention due to the need to monitor our everyday environment. Photonic crystals are sensing materials of the future because of their strong light-manipulating properties. Natural photonic structures are well-suited materials for testing detection principles because they are significantly cheaper than artificial photonic structures and are available in larger sizes. Additionally, natural photonic structures may provide new ideas for developing novel artificial photonic nanoarchitectures with improved properties. In the present paper, we discuss the effects arising from the sensor temperature and the vapor concentration in air during measurements with a photonic crystal-type optical gas sensor. Our results shed light on the sources of discrepancy between simulated and experimental sensing behaviors of photonic crystal-type structures. Through capillary condensation, the vapors will condensate to a liquid state inside the nanocavities. Due to the temperature and radius of curvature dependence of capillary condensation, the measured signals are affected by the sensor temperature as well as by the presence of a nanocavity size distribution. The sensing materials used are natural photonic nanoarchitectures present in the wing scales of blue butterflies.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Materials Science Biomaterials
Authors
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