Diatoms

Selected high-resolution images. Click any image below to view at full resolution.

Selected Recent Publications
X. Xie#, Y. Huang#, Z. Yang#, A. Li#, and X. Zhang*
Advanced Materials, 2024, 36(33): 2403304
+Abstract
Diatom exoskeletons, known as frustules, exhibit a unique multilayer structure that has attracted considerable attention across interdisciplinary research fields as a source of biomorphic inspiration. These frustules possess a hierarchical porous structure, ranging from millimeter-scale foramen pores to nanometer-scale cribellum pores. In this study, this natural template for nanopattern design is leveraged to showcase metamaterials that integrates perfect absorption and subwavelength color printing. The cribellum-inspired hierarchical nanopatterns, organized in a hexagonal unit cell with a periodicity of 300 nm, are realized through a single-step electron beam lithography process. By employing numerical models, it is uncovered that an additional induced collective dipole mode is the key mechanism responsible for achieving outstanding performance in absorption, reaching up to 99%. Analysis of the hierarchical organization reveals that variations in nanoparticle diameter and inter-unit-cell distance lead to shifts and broadening of the resonance peaks. It is also demonstrated that the hierarchical nanopatterns are capable of color reproduction with high uniformity and fidelity, serving as hexagonal pixels for high-resolution color printing. These cribellum-inspired metamaterials offer a novel approach to multifunctional metamaterial design, presenting aesthetic potential applications in the development of robotics and wearable electronic devices, such as smart skin or surface coatings integrated with energy harvesting functionalities.
A. Li#, X. Zhao#, G. Duan#, S.W. Anderson, and X. Zhang*
Advanced Functional Materials, 2019, 29(22): 1809029
+Abstract
Diatoms are photosynthetic algae that exist ubiquitously throughout the planet in water environments. Over the preceding decades, the diatom exoskeletons, termed frustules, featuring abundant micro- and nanopores, have served as the source material and inspiration for myriad research efforts. In this work, it is demonstrated that frustule-inspired hierarchical nanostructure designs may be utilized in the fabrication of metamaterial absorbers, thereby realizing a broadband infrared (IR) absorber with excellent performance in terms of absorption. In an effort to investigate the origin of this absorption characteristic, numerical models are developed to study these structures, revealing that the hierarchical organization of the constituent nanoparticulate metamaterial unit cells introduce an additional resonance mode to the device, broadening the absorption spectrum. It is further demonstrated that the resonant peaks shift linearly as a function of inter-unit-cell spacing in the metamaterial, which is attributed to the induced collective dipole mode by the nanoparticles. Ultimately, the work herein represents an innovative perspective in terms of the design and fabrication of IR absorbers inspired by naturally occurring biomaterials, offering the potential to lead to advances in metamaterial absorber technology.
A. Li#, X. Zhao#, S. Anderson, and X. Zhang*
Small, 2018, 14(47): 1801822
+Abstract
Diatom frustules are a type of porous silicon dioxide microparticle that has long been used in applications ranging from biomedical sensors to dye-sensitized solar cells. The favorable material properties, enormous surface area, and enhanced light scattering capacity support the promise of diatom frustules as candidates for next generation biomedical devices and energy applications. In this study, the vapor–liquid–solid (VLS) method is employed to incorporate silica nanowires on the surface of diatom frustules. Compared to the original frustule structures, the frustule–nanowire composite material’s surface area increases over 3-fold, and the light scattering ability increases by 10%. By varying the gold catalyst thickness during the VLS process, tuning of the resultant nanowire length/density is achieved. Through material characterization, it is determined that both float growth and root growth processes jointly result in the growth of the silica nanowires. From a thermodynamics point of view, the preferential growth of the silica nanowires on frustules is found to have resulted from the enormous partial surface area of gold nanoparticles on the diatom frustules. The frustule–nanowire composite materials have potential applications in the development of novel biomedical sensing devices and may greatly enhance next generation solar cell performance.
A. Li#, W. Zhang#, R. Ghaffarivardavagh#, X. Wang#, S.W. Anderson, and X. Zhang*
Microsystems & Nanoengineering — Nature, 2016, 2: 16064
+Abstract
Diatoms are unicellular, photosynthetic algae that are ubiquitous in aquatic environments. Their unique, three-dimensional (3D) structured silica exoskeletons, also known as frustules, have drawn attention from a variety of research fields due to their extraordinary mechanical properties, enormous surface area, and unique optical properties. Despite their promising use in a range of applications, without methods to uniformly control the frustules’ alignment/orientation, their full potential in technology development cannot be realized. In this paper, we realized and subsequently modeled a simple bubbling method for achieving large-area, uniformly oriented Coscinodiscus species diatom frustules. With the aid of bubble-induced agitations, close-packed frustule monolayers were achieved on the water–air interface with up to nearly 90% of frustules achieving uniform orientation. The interactions between bubble-induced agitations were modeled and analyzed, demonstrating frustule submersion and an adjustment of the orientation during the subsequent rise towards the water’s surface to be fundamental to the experimentally observed uniformity. The method described in this study holds great potential for frustules’ engineering applications in a variety of technologies, from sensors to energy-harvesting devices.
J. Cai#, X. Wang#, A. Li#, S.W. Anderson, and X. Zhang*
Extreme Mechanics Letters, 2015, 4: 186-192
+Abstract
The development of a biologically enabled micro- and nanostencil lithography approach using diatoms is demonstrated. Diatom frustules are initially purified, sorted, and aligned into compact monolayers on underlying silicon substrates. Subsequently, the diatom monolayers are employed as shadow masks during the electron beam deposition of gold (Au) thin films, a process which enables the capacity to mirror the intricate micro- and nanoporous frustule architecture on the underlying silicon substrates. Following Au deposition and diatom frustule dissolution, both sub-micron and nanoscale gold patterns on silicon are realized using this approach. This unique method yields the highly structured patterning of gold and other materials on a variety of substrates, with feature sizes ranging from the sub-micron to the nanoscale, enabling a host of diverse applications.