Paper
20 May 2009 The infrared sensilla in the beetle Melanophila acuminata as model for new infrared sensors
Helmut Schmitz, Volkmar Norkus, Norbert Hess, Herbert Bousack
Author Affiliations +
Proceedings Volume 7365, Bioengineered and Bioinspired Systems IV; 73650A (2009) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.821434
Event: SPIE Europe Microtechnologies for the New Millennium, 2009, Dresden, Germany
Abstract
For the detection of forest fires the "fire-loving" (pyrophilous) jewel beetle Melanophila acuminata uses a pair of sensor arrays each consisting of about 90 infrared (IR) receptors which are located on either sides of the body. The IR receptors most likely have evolved from common contact hair mechanoreceptors. Compared to a mechanoreceptor, an IR receptor shows the following special features: (i) the formation of a complex cuticular sphere instead of the bristle; the sphere consists of a hard outer exocuticular shell as well as of an inner softer and spongy mesocuticular core. (ii) The enclosure of the dendritic tip of the mechanosensitive neuron inside the sphere in a fluid-filled inner pressure chamber which is connected with the system of microcavities and nanocanals in the mesocuticular core. Hence we propose that an IR sensillum most probably acts as a microfluidic converter of infrared radiation into an increase in internal pressure inside the sphere which is measured by the mechanosensitive neuron. Because the miniaturized receptors respond within a few milliseconds to a brief pulse of IR radiation an approach is made to develop technical IR sensors based on the Melanophila IR receptors. Numerical simulations of sensor performance suggest that the sensitivity of a single IR receptor is in the range of 15 mW/cm2. Theoretical calculations which are based on a hypothetical fire of defined temperature and size demonstrate that a beetle should be able to detect a forest fire from a distance of 10 km. A fluidfilled Golay cell was taken as a basis for the design of a first sensor prototype.
© (2009) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Helmut Schmitz, Volkmar Norkus, Norbert Hess, and Herbert Bousack "The infrared sensilla in the beetle Melanophila acuminata as model for new infrared sensors", Proc. SPIE 7365, Bioengineered and Bioinspired Systems IV, 73650A (20 May 2009); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.821434
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Cited by 2 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Infrared radiation

Sensors

Infrared sensors

Optical spheres

Receptors

Absorption

Microfluidics

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