Biomimicry
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Nature inspired innovation
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Using Shark Scales to Design Better Drones, Planes, and Wind Turbines

Using Shark Scales to Design Better Drones, Planes, and Wind Turbines | Biomimicry | Scoop.it

"To build more aerodynamic machines, researchers are drawing inspiration from an unlikely source: the ocean. A team of evolutionary biologists and engineers at Harvard University, in collaboration with colleagues from the University of South Carolina, have shed light on a decades-old mystery about sharkskin and, in the process, demonstrated a new, bioinspired structure that could improve the aerodynamic performance of planes, wind turbines, drones and cars."

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Synthetic Shark Skin Swimsuits Make Swimming Faster

Synthetic Shark Skin Swimsuits Make Swimming Faster | Biomimicry | Scoop.it

"Harvard scientists say that they've managed to replicate one of the most fascinating organs of the animal kingdom in a lab. Their finely-detailed synthetic shark skin could make some of the fastest underwater robots around, and maybe even one day grace human wetsuits or the hulls of ships."

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Researchers Use Multi-material 3D Printing to Fabricate the First Biomimetic Shark Skin

Researchers Use Multi-material 3D Printing to Fabricate the First Biomimetic Shark Skin | Biomimicry | Scoop.it

"Scientists have been trying to unlock the secrets of shark skin for more than 50 years. The key to sharks' hydrodynamic prowess lies in how the rigid, tooth-like structures that coat their flexible skin change the flow of water as sharks swim forward – but attempts to quantify this effect have fallen short. After all, it's tough to fabricate a material that closely mimics shark skin, a marvel of Nature honed over the 400 million years that sharks have sleuthed the seas."

Marcelo Errera's curator insight, July 14, 2015 3:03 PM

Mimicking is a great way of fast-forwarding the design process. It is a never ending process.