Artificial Squid Skin Created
Scientists have found a way to mimic the way the animals' skin generate complex, dynamic patterns of color.
Artificial skin mimicking that of squids and octopuses could one day lead to electronic camouflage suits, researchers say.
Octopuses, squid and cuttlefish are all cephalopods, sea creatures that can rapidly change the color of their skin to conceal themselves or to communicate with others.
The animals accomplish this with dense networks of cells known as chromatophores, which contain sacs of pigment and are embedded in the creatures' skin. Muscles around the chromatophores can make these pigment cells expand, turning them darker, or contract, causing them to turning them lighter; this strategy permits the animals to generate complex, dynamic patterns of color.
Now, materials scientist Aaron Fishman at the University of Bristol in England and his colleagues have designed a system that mimics how cephalopod skin works.
One application could be fast-acting camouflage, for "a cloaking suit that is adept to blending into a variety of environments," Fishman told Live Science.
To design of the new artificial cephalopod skin involves soft, elastic materials into "muscles" that can rapidly change in size and shape in response to electrical signals. Arrays of dye spots are embedded into the "smart materials" making up these muscles.
When the muscles changed size and shape, the dye spots would respond appropriately, either expanding or contracting to change the color of the sheet.
"We were able to mimic patterning seen in biological chromatophores," Fishman said. For example, the researchers were able to mimic the "passing cloud" display of the Australian giant cuttlefish, the largest-known living cuttlefish species; this pattern involves blue-green bands traveling as waves across the animals' skin, which distracts and diverts predators.
Previously, another research team created its own version of artificial cephalopod skin.
That device consisted of flexible sheets of light sensors and temperature-sensitive dye that could automatically sense and adapt to the color of the surroundings. The new design is different in that its color-changing cells are activated by electricity and not heat, which means these cells could react faster and in a more controlled manner, Fishman said.
In addition to camouflage applications, Fishman and his colleagues suggested this artificial cephalopod skin could be used for eye-catching suits. "Complex and dynamic patterns would stand out in times of danger, in, for example, a search-and rescue-operation," Fishman said.
The scientists detailed their findings online June 10 in the journal Interface.
Editor's Note: This article was updated to clarify that there is no squid skin prototype; the researchers designed the technology in a computer model.
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What has eight arms with hundreds of suckers, eyes the size of grapefruit and a razor-sharp beak? A giant squid! A team of scientists and the Discovery Channel shot footage of this notoriously elusive creature in action. Click ahead for more squidly fun.
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