Abstract

The structural colours of certain insects are produced by three-dimensional periodic cuticle networks. The topology of the cuticle network is known to be based on the mathematically well-defined triply periodic minimal surface. In this paper, we report the discovery of an I-WP minimal-surface-based photonic crystal on the scale of a longhorn beetle. In contrast to gyroid or diamond surfaces, which are found in butterfly and weevil scales, respectively, the I-WP surface is an unbalanced minimal surface, wherein two subspaces separated by the surface are different in terms of shape and volume fraction. Furthermore, adjacent photonic crystal domains were observed to share a particular crystal plane as their domain boundary, indicating that they were developed as twin crystals. These structural features pose certain new questions regarding the development of biological photonic crystals. We also performed an optical analysis of the structural colour of the longhorn beetle and successfully explained the wavelength of reflection by the photonic bandgap of the I-WP photonic crystal.

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