Functional Morphologies

Team: Katia Zolotovsky (PI), Avantika Velho*, Shuyuan Zheng*, Kate Ross, Hongshun Chen, Dr.Ling Li

Client : Hyundai Motor Group

My Role: I conducted observational studies on the self-cleaning abilities of insect wings and contributed to the characterization and parameterization of their geometry. I developed a novel chitosan biomaterial for our membranes and performed mechanical testing of its material properties, as well as experimental testing on the hydrophobicity of surface architectures. Additionally, I conceptualized potential applications and use cases for our technology, co-authored a paper, and presented this research at eCAADe in 2022.

2021-22

Providence, RI, USA

Biomimetic Self-Cleaning Surfaces

In order to maintain lightweightness for flight, insects must keep their wing surfaces clean and dry. Traditionally, we achieve hydrophobicity by applying mostly petroleum-based materials. However, nature organizes biomaterials—in this case, chitin—into efficient structural solutions. In this project, we focused on insect wings as a model for lightweight architectural membranes with self-cleaning functionality and established a workflow to investigate and combine the structural superiority and biological materiality from our source of inspiration.

Process