Laser engineering of biomimetic surfaces
E. Stratakis, J. Bonse, J. Heitz, J. Siegel, G. D. Tsibidis, E., Skoulas, A. Papadopoulos, A. Mimidis, A.-C. Joel, P. Comanns, J. Kr\"uger, C., Florian, Y. Fuentes-Edfuf, J. Solis, and W. Baumgartner

TL;DR
This paper reviews laser-based techniques for creating biomimetic micro- and nano-structured surfaces inspired by natural species, highlighting their potential for diverse applications in materials science and engineering.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of current laser processing methods for fabricating bioinspired surfaces with advanced functionalities.
Findings
Laser processing enables precise micro- and nano-scale structuring.
Hierarchical laser modifications create complex biomimetic patterns.
Laser techniques open new possibilities for surface functionalities.
Abstract
The exciting properties of micro- and nano-patterned surfaces found in natural species hide a virtually endless potential of technological ideas, opening new opportunities for innovation and exploitation in materials science and engineering. Due to the diversity of biomimetic surface functionalities, inspirations from natural surfaces are interesting for a broad range of applications in engineering, including phenomena of adhesion, friction, wear, lubrication, wetting phenomena, self-cleaning, antifouling, antibacterial phenomena, thermoregulation and optics. Lasers are increasingly proving to be promising tools for the precise and controlled structuring of materials at micro- and nano-scales. When ultrashort-pulsed lasers are used, the optimal interplay between laser and material parameters enables structuring down to the nanometer scale. Besides this, a unique aspect of laser…
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