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Introduction to Biomimicry for Fluid Mechanics Students. Defne Apul and Jill Shalabi University of Toledo Department of Civil Engineering Feb. 3, 2009. You will use biomimicry in your projects.
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Introduction to Biomimicry for Fluid Mechanics Students Defne Apul and Jill Shalabi University of Toledo Department of Civil Engineering Feb. 3, 2009
You will use biomimicry in your projects Part A: You will perform an experiment to measure somethingPart B: You will theoretically calculate what you would expect to see in theexperimentPart C: You will compare the results from parts A and B Part D: You will follow up with where else this phenomenon is used in natureand in existing technology
What is biomimicry? • From • bios, meaning “life” + mimesis, meaning “to imitate” • Biomimicry = to imitate life
Biomimicry Definition • Term first used by Janine Benyus in her book, Biomimicry: Innovations Inspired by Nature (1997) • Viewing nature as role model/teacher– nature has already solved many of the technological and sustainability problems that we face today - learning from nature, not about nature • Imitate nature’s processes, not products
Conquest of Nature? • “Conquest” of nature has consequences in today’s scientific and social paradigms
Us Linear Centralized Individualistic Independent Inflexible Singular Them Circular Decentralized Cooperative Interdependent Adaptive Redundant Us vs. “Them”
Our Results • Depleted natural resources • Habitat loss • Climate change • Endangered/extinct species • Persistent bioaccumulative toxins • Dependence on petroleum • Problems!
Their Results • Life creates conditions conducive to life • Energy only from sunlight • Materials synthesized at ambient temperatures using local materials • No toxic pollution • only a few of all of chemically possible structures are synthesized (humans use the entire periodic table!) • No waste • No problem!
Nature as Teacher • When faced with a problem, ask the question “What organism needs to solve the same problem to survive….What Would Nature Do?”
Nature as Teacher (cont’d) • Inspiration - look to nature to transform society • water • energy • materials • food • Invention - original processing starting with a natural process that solves a similar problem • Information - life adds info in the form of shape/structure
Pros and Cons • UN Environmental Program has biomimicry project – “Nature’s 100 Best” • Habitat conservation • Copy nature’s products rather than processes • GE, Proctor & Gamble, Boeing, General Mills, Nike recruiting biologists
Pros and Cons (cont’d) • Complexity occurs at nano- and micro-scale • Behavior cannot be deduced from a knowledge of components – the whole is greater than the sum of parts • Nature doesn’t work toward some “final” goal like we (engineers) do • Result of random experiments over thousands or millions of generations
Summary • We are facing increasing pressures: • Energy • Water • Materials • Food • Nature has already “figured out” how to avoid these problems • Look to nature as a teacher/role model, but nature is not always cooperative…..
“It’s no problem to apply a 0.2 Newton pre-load to a patch of gecko adhesive and drag it in a distal direction at one micron per second. But try asking a gecko to do the same thing with its foot. It’ll probably just bite you.“ – Kellar Autumn, gecko adhesion researcher
Acknowledgements • Slide #4 www.wisebread.com/hitching-a-ride-on-an-airplane • Slide #5 http://estrip.org/elmwood/users/matthew/images/1105/burr3857.jpg http://www.kidsgardening.com/2005.kids.garden.news/may/burrs.jpg • Slide #6 Benyus, Janine. 1997. Biomimicry: Innovations Inspired by Nature. HarperCollins Publishers, Inc. New York, NY, 320 pp. • Slide #7 http://www.marykayemusic.com/images/Illustrations/BigBadWolf.jpg • Slide #8 http://greenasathistle.files.wordpress.com/2007/03/forks.jpg • Slide #11http://www.stpatricksguild.com/prodimg/401530.JPG • Slide #13 http://www.leopardgeckoguide.com/wp-content/gallery/geckos/gecko-feet.jpg • Slide #14 http://earthfirst.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/03/whale-bump.jpg, http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2008/07/080707222315.htm www.animals.nationalgeographic.com • Slide#15 http://www.bioteams.com/images/nature_as_desig.jpg • Slide #16 http://www.dancewithshadows.com/auto/mercedes-benz-bionic-car-gallery.asp • Slide #17 http://www.inhabitat.com/2007/12/10/building-modelled-on-termites-eastgate-centre-in-zimbabwe/
Acknowledgements (cont’d) • Slide #18 http://www.allposters.com/-sp/Seashell-on-Beach-Posters_i1100827_.htm http://www.virginpacificwater.com/whole_pipe_op_800x786.jpg • Slide #19 UN Environmental Program http://www.unep.org/Documents.Multilingual/Default.asp?DocumentID=535&ArticleID=5816&l=en • Slide #20 http://farm2.static.flickr.com/1107/1435241752_a20d75347f.jpg?v=0 http://www.aerosil.com/pub/NR/rdonlyres/65199EEB-DD68-422A-A27F-F91AF82BA85E/0/lotuseffect0005.jpg Lotus Effect:http://biodsign.wordpress.com/2008/08/27/lotus-effect-efecto-lotus/ • Slide #23 http://www.tc.umn.edu/~gambl007/geckos/gekko_gecko_mo2.jpg http://ngm.nationalgeographic.com/2008/04/biomimetics/tom-muellertext/8