By April Reese, Source: Discover Magazine

shark

Expert swimmers may want to rethink their choice of swimwear. While many a swimmer dons smooth, high-tech spandex, it turns out that one of nature’s fastest swimmers—sharks—actually have rough skin. And now, swimmers will be happy to hear, researchers have developed a fake shark skin.

It’s been known that shark skin is comprised of millions of microscopic, overlapping scales. Called denticles, they disrupt the flow of water over the animal’s body, reducing drag. But to figure out exactly how these denticles boost speed, researchers needed to test how altering the skin affects how water moves across it. So they built a synthetic one.
Synthesizing Shark Skin

“You can’t modify real shark skin,” explains George Lauder from Harvard University, one of the authors of the study, published Wednesday in the Journal of Experimental Biology. Lauder found a piece of mako shark at a local fish market, and scanned the skin to create a high-resolution view of the surface. Next, he and his team zoomed in on a single denticle to build a detailed model of its structure, and then reproduced it thousands of times in a computer model.

But they needed to build a real model. To do that, they constructed a realistic artificial skin using a 3-D printer, which allowed them to embed hard denticles in a flexible substrate—after some trial and error.

Read the full article at: Discover Magazine