SOME ANIMAL YOU NEVER BEILEV ARE ON THIS EARTH
Nanfang Yu, assistant
professor of applied
physics at Columbia
Engineering, and
colleagues from the
University of Zürich and
the University of
Washington, have
discovered two key
strategies that enable
Saharan silver ants to
stay cool in one of the
hottest terrestrial
environments on Earth.
Yu’s team is the first to
demonstrate that the
ants use a coat of
uniquely shaped hairs to
control electromagnetic
waves over an
extremely broad range
from the solar
spectrum (visible and
near-infrared) to the
thermal radiation
spectrum (mid-
infrared), and that
different physical
mechanisms are used in
different spectral bands
to realize the same
biological function of
reducing body
temperature. Their
research, “Saharan
silver ants keep cool by
combining enhanced
optical reflection and
radiative heat
dissipation,” is published
June 18 in
Science magazine.
“This is a telling
example of how
evolution has triggered
the adaptation of
physical attributes to
accomplish a
physiological task and
ensure survival, in this
case to prevent
Saharan silver ants
from getting
overheated,” Yu says.
“While there have been
many studies of the
physical optics of living
systems in the
ultraviolet and visible
range of the spectrum,
our understanding of
the role of infrared light
in their lives is much
less advanced. Our
study shows that light
invisible to the human
eye does not
necessarily mean that it
does not play a crucial
role for living
organisms.”
The project was initially
triggered by wondering
whether the ants’
conspicuous silvery
coats were important in
keeping them cool in
blistering heat. Yu’s
team found that the
answer to this question
was much broader once
they realized the
important role of
infrared light. Their
discovery that there is
a biological solution to a
thermoregulatory
problem could lead to
the development of
novel flat optical
components that
exhibit optimal cooling
properties.
“Such biologically
inspired cooling surfaces
will have high
reflectivity in the solar
spectrum and high
radiative efficiency in
the thermal radiation
spectrum,” Yu explains.
“So this may generate
useful applications such
as a cooling surface for
vehicles, buildings,
instruments, and even
clothing.”
Saharan silver ants
(Cataglyphis bombycina)
forage in the Saharan
Desert in the full
midday sun when
surface temperatures
reach up to 70°C
(158°F), and they must
keep their body
temperature below
their critical thermal
maximum of 53.6°C
(128.48°F) most of the
time. In their wide-
ranging foraging
journeys, the ants
search for corpses of
insects and other
arthropods that have
succumbed to the
thermally harsh desert
conditions, which they
are able to endure more
successfully. Being
most active during the
hottest moment of the
day also allows these
ants to avoid predatory
desert lizards.
Researchers have long
wondered how these
tiny insects (about 10
mm, or 3/8” long) can
survive under such
thermally extreme and
stressful conditions.
Using electron
microscopy and ion
beam milling, Yu’s group
discovered that the
ants are covered on the
top and sides of their
bodies with a coating of
uniquely shaped hairs
with triangular cross-
sections that keep
them cool in two ways.
These hairs are highly
reflective under the
visible and near-infrared
light, i.e., in the region of
maximal solar radiation
(the ants run at a
speed of up to 0.7
meters per second and
look like droplets of
mercury on the desert
surface). The hairs are
also highly emissive in
the mid-infrared portion
of the electromagnetic
spectrum, where they
serve as an
antireflection layer that
enhances the ants’
ability to offload excess
heat via thermal
radiation, which is
emitted from the hot
body of the ants to the
cold sky. This passive
cooling effect works
under the full sun
whenever the insects
are exposed to the clear
sky.
“To appreciate the
effect of thermal
radiation, think of the
chilly feeling when you
get out of bed in the
morning,” says Yu. “Half
of the energy loss at
that moment is due to
thermal radiation since
your skin temperature
is temporarily much
higher than that of the
surrounding
environment.”
The researchers found
that the enhanced
reflectivity in the solar
spectrum and enhanced
thermal radiative
efficiency have
comparable
contributions to
reducing the body
temperature of silver
ants by 5 to 10 degrees
compared to if the ants
were without the hair
cover. “The fact that
these silver ants can
manipulate
electromagnetic waves
over such a broad range
of spectrum shows us
just how complex the
function of these
seemingly simple
biological organs of an
insect can be,”
observes Norman Nan
Shi, lead author of the
study and PhD student
who works with Yu at
Columbia Engineering.
Yu and Shi collaborated
on the project with
Rüdiger Wehner,
professor at the Brain
Research Institute,
University of Zürich,
Switzerland, and Gary
Bernard, electrical
engineering professor
at the University of
Washington, Seattle,
who are renowned
experts in the study of
insect physiology and
ecology. The Columbia
Engineering team
designed and conducted
all experimental work,
including optical and
infrared microscopy and
spectroscopy
experiments,
thermodynamic
experiments, and
computer simulation
and modeling. They are
currently working on
adapting the
engineering lessons
learned from the study
of Saharan silver ants
to create flat optical
components, or
“metasurfaces,” that
consist of a planar array
of nanophotonic
elements and provide
designer optical and
thermal radiative
properties.
Yu and his team plan
next to extend their
research to other
animals and organisms
living in extreme
environments, trying to
learn the strategies
these creatures have
developed to cope with
harsh environmental
conditions.
“Animals have evolved
diverse strategies to
perceive and utilize
electromagnetic waves:
deep sea fish have eyes
that enable them to
maneuver and prey in
dark waters, butterflies
create colors from
nanostructures in their
wings, honey bees can
see and respond to
ultraviolet signals, and
fireflies use flash
communication
systems,” Yu adds.
“Organs evolved for
perceiving or controlling
electromagnetic waves
often surpass
analogous man-made
devices in both
sophistication and
efficiency.
Understanding and
harnessing natural
design concepts
deepens our knowledge
of complex biological
systems and inspires
ideas for creating novel
technologies.”
The study was
supported by the
National Science
Foundation under the
Electronics, Photonics,
and Magnetic Devices
program
(ECCS-1307948) and
Physics of Living
Systems program
(PHY-1411445), and the
Air Force Office of
Scientific Research
(AFOSR) Multidisciplinary
Research Program of
the University Research
Initiative (MURI)
program
(FA9550-14-1-0389).
Research was also
carried out in part at
the Center for
Functional
Nanomaterials,
Brookhaven National
Laboratory
Created at 2017-02-27 15:33:16
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