| Literature DB >> 29920790 |
Yang Yang1, Xuan Song2,3, Xiangjia Li1, Zeyu Chen4, Chi Zhou5, Qifa Zhou4, Yong Chen1.
Abstract
Nature has developed high-performance materials and structures over millions of years of evolution and provides valuable sources of inspiration for the design of next-generation structural materials, given the variety of excellent mechanical, hydrodynamic, optical, and electrical properties. Biomimicry, by learning from nature's concepts and design principles, is driving a paradigm shift in modern materials science and technology. However, the complicated structural architectures in nature far exceed the capability of traditional design and fabrication technologies, which hinders the progress of biomimetic study and its usage in engineering systems. Additive manufacturing (three-dimensional (3D) printing) has created new opportunities for manipulating and mimicking the intrinsically multiscale, multimaterial, and multifunctional structures in nature. Here, an overview of recent developments in 3D printing of biomimetic reinforced mechanics, shape changing, and hydrodynamic structures, as well as optical and electrical devices is provided. The inspirations are from various creatures such as nacre, lobster claw, pine cone, flowers, octopus, butterfly wing, fly eye, etc., and various 3D-printing technologies are discussed. Future opportunities for the development of biomimetic 3D-printing technology to fabricate next-generation functional materials and structures in mechanical, electrical, optical, and biomedical engineering are also outlined.Entities:
Keywords: 3D printing; bioinspired mechanics reinforced structure; bioinspired optics; bioinspired shape-changing structures; wearable sensors
Year: 2018 PMID: 29920790 DOI: 10.1002/adma.201706539
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adv Mater ISSN: 0935-9648 Impact factor: 30.849