The height of chitinous ridges alone produces the entire structural colour palette
Abstract
The colourful wings of butterflies result from the interaction between light and the intricate chitinous nanostructures on butterflies' scales. This study demonstrates that just by reproducing the chitinous ridges present in butterfly scales (i.e., without any other secondary structure), the entire colour palette is achieved. This result was achieved using a new methodology based on the controlled reproduction of parts of the biological structure of complex chitinous systems using their native chemistry, enabling the isolation of different features' contributions. Here we isolate the contribution of the ridges and their variations as producing and modulating colour hue. The results suggest that complicated butterfly scales may be non-ideal solutions for producing colour when multifunctionality is not considered.
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