Bionic femtosecond laser manufacturing for impressionistic camouflage infrared display
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Abstract
White Cyphochilus insulanus beetles, exhibiting both environmental camouflage display and radiative cooling functions, serve as a good prototype for biomimetic fabrication. As inspired, this work presents a femtosecond (fs) laser-based biomimetic fabrication strategy that takes full use of the synthesized radiative cooling nanomaterials for a groundbreaking stimuli-responsive infrared (IR) impressionistic camouflage display. The proposed technique is capable of readily transforming various substrates (quartz glass and metals including Ti, Al, Zr, and W) into self-assembled porous networks (aerogels) consisting of oxygen-vacancy-rich oxide nanoparticles. Surprisingly, the emissions of all as-prepared porous particle-networks in the radiative-cooling long-wavelength infrared (LWIR) band are above 95%, with the SiO2 aerogels reaching a maximum of 99.6%. Benefiting from the far-from-equilibrium thermodynamic kinetics, metastable phases of anatase TiO2, tetragonal zirconia (t-ZrO2), and monoclinic WO3 (Pc) are synthesizable, opening up opportunities for exploring their optical applications. Taking the low-temperature metastable phase WO3 (Pc) as representative for systematic studies, it is found that (1) the ratio WO3 (Pc) phase to that of room-temperature phase of WO3 (P21/n) can be tailored by modulation of processing parameters; (2) laser synthesized aerogels with hybrid phases of WO3 (Pc) and WO3 (P21/n) have a brighter visible whiteness, higher visible/near-infrared (NIR) spectral selectivity than the natural prototype of white Cyphochilus insulanus beetles but with comparable LWIR emittance. White WO3 aerogel in situ deposited during flexibly fs laser artistic patterning can blur the painting features due to its radiative cooling effect, allowing a colorful impressionistic IR display in the heating mode. What’s more, invisible painting features concealed by the white deposited WO3 aerogel are clearly/faintly distinguishable by introducing external stimuli of a human hand and sample heating, respectively, catalyzing progress in optical encryption and selectively stimuli-responsive decryption display in the infrared band.
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