UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. — When most people see a leafhopper in their backyard garden, they notice little more than a tiny green or striped insect flicking from leaf to leaf. But these insects are actually master engineers, capable of building some of the most complex natural nanostructures known, which makes them invisible to many of their predators. Their secret lies in brochosomes: tiny, hollow nanostructures that leafhoppers naturally produce and coat themselves with. A team at Penn State has now developed a high-speed platform capable of producing synthetic versions of brochosomes at a rate exceeding 100,000 per second, a technological achievement that could lead to next-generation camouflage, sensors and other advancements for humans.
They published their work today (Dec. 12) in ACS Nano.
“Each brochosome is smaller than a speck of pollen yet has astonishingly intricate architecture, looking like a perfectly patterned soccer ball covered with nanoscale pores,” said Tak-Sing Wong, professor of mechanical engineering and biomedical engineering.
Awarded little attention outside entomology circles, leafhopper brochosomes have fascinated scientists because of their complexity and optical behavior. The unique design of brochosomes serves a dual purpose. One is absorbing ultraviolet (UV) light, which reduces visibility to predators with UV vision, such as birds and reptiles, because the hole size is perfect for absorbing light at the UV frequency. They also scatter visible light, creating an anti-reflective shield against potential threats — it’s so effective that their wings appear nearly non-reflective, offering natural camouflage from predators.
This insect trickery inspired Wong and his research team, who previously mimicked the intricate nanostructure of brochosomes to manufacture synthetic versions, but at a limited scale. Now, the team’s new platform can produce synthetic brochosomes at an estimated rate of 140,000 particles per second — a productivity leap that could finally make the synthetic version of these particles practical for real-world technologies, Wong said.
Co-author Jinsol Choi, postdoctoral scholar in Wong’s lab group, explained that because many potential applications — from non-reflective surfaces for invisibility cloaks to high-surface-area catalysts and sensing materials — require materials massive quantities of precisely engineered nanoparticles, the ability to mass-produce these complex structures at high speed brings them much closer to commercial use.
“Our group has been working on synthetic brochosomes for almost a decade,” said Wong, who is also part of the Materials Research Institute, co-authored the study outlining the work along with Choi. “The advance marks a significant step forward from our group’s earlier efforts, which first demonstrated the potential of brochosomes to manipulate light. The new study not only recreates their complex architecture but also shows how to manufacture them with unprecedented precision and scale. Until now, humans could not reproduce these structures at comparable scales or complexity. Their fully 3D geometry and nanoscale features pushed beyond what even our most advanced fabrication tools could reliably create.”