DocumentCode
2311465
Title
Photonic Crystals in Nature
Author
Tadaszak, Rafal ; Ludian, Krzysztof ; Olszewski, Jakub ; Ryznar, Tomasz
Author_Institution
Fac. of Microsyst. Electron. & Photonics, Wroclaw Univ. of Technol.
fYear
2006
fDate
June 30 2006-July 2 2006
Firstpage
61
Lastpage
62
Abstract
Photonic crystals have been subject of research for the last two decades. These artificial materials behave towards optical electromagnetic radiation in the same way as semiconductors behave towards electrons. A lot of materials and technologies have been tested for usefulness in this field. At the moment the most promising material is silicon processed with microelectronic technologies. It turned out however, that what people discovered a couple of years ago, Mother Nature created millions of years earlier. Examples of photonic crystals structures occur in hard minerals (opal), as well as in living creatures (butterfly wings, fur of the sea mouse). Naturally created photonic crystal structures aren´t all the same, they differ in forms and functions. Two as well as three-dimensional structures are reported. That makes them even more interesting subject for research. The most interesting examples of photonic crystal structures existing in nature are presented and classified in this article
Keywords
light propagation; light reflection; natural fibres; optical materials; photonic band gap; photonic crystals; artificial materials; butterfly wings; fur; hard minerals; light propagation; light reflection; microelectronic technologies; opal; optical electromagnetic radiation; photonic crystals; sea mouse; semiconductors; Crystalline materials; Electromagnetic radiation; Electron optics; Materials testing; Microelectronics; Minerals; Optical materials; Photonic crystals; Semiconductor materials; Silicon;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Photonics and Microsystems, 2006 International Students and Young Scientists Workshop
Conference_Location
Wroclaw
Print_ISBN
1-4244-0392-8
Electronic_ISBN
1-4244-0393-6
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/STYSW.2006.343672
Filename
4149611
Link To Document