Light management lessons from nature for building applications
https://doi.org/10.1016/J.PROENG.2016.04.049Abstract
The increasing environmental awareness in the building context has raised the demands towards more efficient use of resources and the development of renewable energy solutions. Buildings are exposed to solar radiation at different intensities throughout multiple timescales, which requires efficient management of light. Managing light becomes more challenging when several elements are considered simultaneously, e.g. minimizing heat gain, while maximizing daylight, yet considering glare. Living organisms are equipped with unique strategies to manage light for survival, communication, and energy matters. In this context, developing biomimetic design solutions for buildings have a great potential for innovation. The current work focuses on the initial phase of a biomimetic design process, presenting a structured framework of light managing strategies that facilitates the search for, and the selection of, appropriate strategies from the large database of nature. The framework encapsulates a basic array of strategies for managing light; elaborates on the involved factors; and lists examples of organisms and systems from nature, for the analogical development of biomimetic designs that respond to light.
References (64)
- A. Compagno, Intelligent Glass Facades: Material, Practice, Design, Birkhauser Verlag, Switzerland, 1995.
- M.F. Land, The optical structures of animal eyes, Current Biology, 2005, 15(9) R319-R323.
- E. Brunig, Tree forms in relation to environmental conditions: an ecological viewpoint, Tree physiology and yield improvement, 1976.
- R.S. Loomis, W.A. Williams, A. Hall, Agricultural productivity, Annual Review of Plant Physiology, 1971, 22(1) 431-468.
- M. Lopez, R. Rubio, S. Martín, B. Croxford, R. Jackson, Active materials for adaptive architectural envelopes based on plant adaptation principles, Journal of Facade Design and Engineering, 2015, 3(1) 27-38.
- L. Badarnah, Towards the LIVING envelope: biomimetics for building envelope adaptation, 2012, Delft University of Technology: Delft, the Netherlands. doi: 10.4233/uuid:4128b611-9b48-4c8d-b52f-38a59ad5de65
- L. Badarnah, U. Kadri, A methodology for the generation of biomimetic design concepts, Architectural Science Review, 2015, 58(2) 120- 133. doi: 0.1080/00038628.2014.922458
- L. Badarnah, A biophysical framework of heat regulation strategies for the design of biomimetic building envelopes, Procedia Engineering, 2015, 118 1225-1235.
- L. Badarnah, J.E. Fernández, Morphological configurations inspired by nature for thermal insulation materials, in International Association for Shell and Spatial Structures (IASS) Symposium 2015: Future Visions2015.
- L. Badarnah, Y.N. Farchi, U. Knaack, Solutions from nature for building envelope thermoregulation, in Design & Nature V: Comparing Design in Nature with Science and Engineering, A. Carpi, C.A. Brebbia, Editors. 2010, WITpress: Pisa, Italy. p. 251-262.
- D. Presti, M. Delbrück, Photoreceptors for biosynthesis, energy storage and vision, Plant, Cell & Environment, 1978, 1(2) 81-100.
- M.F. Land, D.E. Nilsson, Animal eyes, Oxford University Press, 2012.
- J. Aizenberg, V.C. Sundar, A.D. Yablon, J.C. Weaver, G. Chen, Biological glass fibers: correlation between optical and structural properties, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 2004, 101(10) 3358-3363.
- C.C. Perry, T. Keeling-Tucker, Biosilicification: the role of the organic matrix in structure control, JBIC Journal of Biological Inorganic Chemistry, 2000, 5(5) 537-550.
- V.C. Sundar, A.D. Yablon, J.L. Grazul, M. Ilan, J. Aizenberg, Fibre-optical features of a glass sponge, Nature, 2003, 424(6951) 899-900.
- J. Aizenberg, J.C. Weaver, M.S. Thanawala, V.C. Sundar, D.E. Morse, P. Fratzl, Skeleton of Euplectella sp.: structural hierarchy from the nanoscale to the macroscale, Science, 2005, 309(5732) 275-278.
- K. Moses, Evolutionary biology: fly eyes get the whole picture, Nature, 2006, 443(7112) 638-639.
- M.F. Land, The optics of animal eyes, Contemporary Physics, 1988, 29(5) 435-455.
- M.F. Land, Animal eyes with mirror optics, Scientific American, 1978, 239 126-134.
- S. Appleby, W. Muntz, Occlusable yellow corneas in Tetraodontidae, The Journal of Experimental Biology, 1979, 83(1) 249-259.
- O.Y. Orlov, A.G. Gamburtzeva, Changeable coloration of cornea in the fish Hexagrammos octogrammus, 1976.
- O.Y. Orlov, S.L. Kondrashev, Changeable coloration of cornea in fishes and its distribution, Iugosl Physiol Pharmacol Acta, 1998, 34 359- 369.
- S.P. Collin, H.B. Collin, The fish cornea: adaptations for different aquatic environments, 2001.
- H. Yahya, A. Clarke, Design in Nature, Ta-Ha, 2002.
- Watcher, The Amazing Housefly Part 2: Coolest Eye Ever, in Blog: Watching the World Wake Up, 2009, [retrieved September 2012].
- T.W. Cronin, M.L. Porter, Exceptional variation on a common theme: the evolution of crustacean compound eyes, Evolution: Education and Outreach, 2008, 1(4) 463-475.
- D. Castelvecchi, Dark power: pigment seems to put radiation to good use, Science News, 2007, 171(21) 325-325.
- E. Dadachova, R.A. Bryan, X. Huang, T. Moadel, A.D. Schweitzer, P. Aisen, J.D. Nosanchuk, A. Casadevall, Ionizing radiation changes the electronic properties of melanin and enhances the growth of melanized fungi, PloS one, 2007, 2(5) e457.
- M. Kriegh, J. Kriegh, Growth, form and proportion in nature: lessons for human habitation in off planet environments, 2003, SAE Technical Paper.
- L. Badarnah, U. Knaack, Organizational features in leaves for application in shading systems for building envelopes, in Proceedings of the Fourth Design & Nature Conference: Comparing Design and Nature with Science and Engineering2008. p. 87-96.
- J.L. Mullen, C. Weinig, R.P. Hangarter, Shade avoidance and the regulation of leaf inclination in Arabidopsis, Plant, Cell & Environment, 2006, 29(6) 1099-1106.
- E. Ezcurra, C. Montaña, S. Arizaga, Architecture, light interception, and distribution of Larrea species in the Monte Desert, Argentina, Ecology, 1991 23-34.
- D.A. King, The functional significance of leaf angle in Eucalyptus, Australian Journal of Botany, 1997, 45(4) 619-639.
- D.S. Falster, M. Westoby, Leaf size and angle vary widely across species: what consequences for light interception?, New Phytologist, 2003, 158(3) 509-525.
- R. Satter, Leaf movements and tendril curling, Encyclopedia of plant physiology, 1979, 7 442-484.
- H. Muraoka, A. Takenaka, Y. Tang, H. Koizumi, I. Washitani, Flexible Leaf Orientations ofArisaema heterophyllumMaximize Light Capture in a Forest Understorey and Avoid Excess Irradiance at a Deforested Site, Annals of Botany, 1998, 82(3) 297-307.
- V.L. Barradas, H.G. Jones, J.A. Clark, Leaf orientation and distribution in a Phaseolus vulgaris L. crop and their relation to light microclimate, International journal of biometeorology, 1999, 43(2) 64-70.
- C. Darwin, F. Darwin, The power of movement in plants, John Murray, 1880.
- G. Shell, A. Lang, P. Sale, Quantitative measures of leaf orientation and heliotropic response in sunflower, bean, pepper and cucumber, Agricultural meteorology, 1974, 13(1) 25-37.
- J. Ehleringer, I. Forseth, Solar tracking by plants, Science, 1980, 210(4474) 1094-1098.
- R.W. Pearcy, H. Muraoka, F. Valladares, Crown architecture in sun and shade environments: assessing function and trade-offs with a three- dimensional simulation model, New Phytol, 2005, 166(3) 791-800.
- H.S. Horn, The adaptive geometry of trees, Vol. 3, Princeton University Press, 1971.
- K.J. Niklas, The Role of Phyllotatic Pattern as a" Developmental Constraint" On the Interception of Light by Leaf Surfaces, Evolution, 1988 1-16.
- L. Poorter, M.J. Werger, Light environment, sapling architecture, and leaf display in six rain forest tree species, American Journal of Botany, 1999, 86(10) 1464-1473.
- D.A. King, Correlations between biomass allocation, relative growth rate and light environment in tropical forest saplings, Functional ecology, 1991 485-492.
- P.S. Nobel, Interception of photosynthetically active radiation by cacti of different morphology, Oecologia, 1980, 45(2) 160-166.
- J.D. Mauseth, Theoretical aspects of surface-to-volume ratios and water-storage capacities of succulent shoots, American Journal of Botany, 2000, 87(8) 1107-1115.
- W. Hooker, First Book in Physiology: For the Use of Schools and Families, Sheldon & Company, 1865.
- Z.-Z. Gu, H.-M. Wei, R.-Q. Zhang, G.-Z. Han, C. Pan, H. Zhang, X.-J. Tian, Z.-M. Chen, Artificial silver ragwort surface, Applied Physics Letters, 2005, 86(20) 201915.
- J. Sun, B. Bhushan, J. Tong, Structural coloration in nature, RSC Advances, 2013, 3(35) 14862-14889.
- S. Kinoshita, S. Yoshioka, K. Kawagoe, Mechanisms of structural colour in the Morpho butterfly: cooperation of regularity and irregularity in an iridescent scale, Proceedings of the Royal Society of London B: Biological Sciences, 2002, 269(1499) 1417-1421.
- J.P. Vigneron, J.-F. Colomer, M. Rassart, A.L. Ingram, V. Lousse, Structural origin of the colored reflections from the black-billed magpie feathers, Physical Review E, 2006, 73(2) 021914.
- J.T. Bagnara, P.J. Fernandez, R. Fujii, On the blue coloration of vertebrates †, Pigment Cell Research, 2007, 20(1) 14-26.
- N. Shashar, P. Rutledge, T. Cronin, Polarization vision in cuttlefish in a concealed communication channel?, Journal of Experimental Biology, 1996, 199(9) 2077-2084.
- J. Ridley, Packing efficiency in sunflower heads, Mathematical Biosciences, 1982, 58(1) 129-139.
- R. Takaki, Y. Ogiso, M. Hayashi, A. Katsu, Simulations of Sunflower spirals and Fibonacci numbers, FORMA-TOKYO-, 2003, 18(4) 295- 305.
- M. Dicker, J. Rossiter, I. Bond, P. Weaver, Biomimetic photo-actuation: sensing, control and actuation in sun-tracking plants, Bioinspiration & biomimetics, 2014, 9(3) 036015.
- B. Greiner, W.A. Ribi, E.J. Warrant, Retinal and optical adaptations for nocturnal vision in the halictid bee Megalopta genalis, Cell and tissue research, 2004, 316(3) 377-390.
- I.N. Miaoulis, B.D. Heilman, Butterfly thin films serve as solar collectors, Annals of the Entomological Society of America, 1998, 91(1) 122-127.
- D.A. Sims, J.A. Gamon, Relationships between leaf pigment content and spectral reflectance across a wide range of species, leaf structures and developmental stages, Remote sensing of environment, 2002, 81(2) 337-354.
- P. Qu, F. Chen, H. Liu, Q. Yang, J. Lu, J. Si, Y. Wang, X. Hou, A simple route to fabricate artificial compound eye structures, Optics express, 2012, 20(5) 5775-5782.
- R.A. Potyrailo, H. Ghiradella, A. Vertiatchikh, K. Dovidenko, J.R. Cournoyer, E. Olson, Morpho butterfly wing scales demonstrate highly selective vapour response, Nature Photonics, 2007, 1(2) 123-128.
- K. Yu, T. Fan, S. Lou, D. Zhang, Biomimetic optical materials: Integration of nature's design for manipulation of light, Progress in Materials Science, 2013, 58(6) 825-873.
- L.P. Lee, R. Szema, Inspirations from biological optics for advanced photonic systems, Science, 2005, 310(5751) 1148-1150.