Melanin
influences light reflection and absorption and is known
to be one of the elements producing structural color, such as that
in the feathers of birds. In this study, we used polydopamine (PDA),
an artificial melanin, as a light-absorbing material and examined
in detail the effect of its composite method on the structural color.
The following two composite methods were investigated using cerium(IV)
oxide (CeO2) particles as a core particle: binary coassembly
of CeO2 and PDA particles and unary assembly of CeO2@PDA core–shell particles. Although both methods dramatically
improved the visibility of the structural color by suppressing the
scattered light owing to the light absorption capability of the PDA,
there was a difference in the particle arrangement, angle dependence
of the structural color, and color tone change. By selecting the PDA
composite method, the guidelines for providing high visibility and
the desired structural color were presented.
Natural
melanin affects the reflection and absorption of light,
and it is known as an important element in producing bright structural
colors in nature. In this study, we prepared core–shell particles
using a melanin precursor polymer, that is, polytyrosine (PTy), as
a shell layer by the oxidative polymerization of tyrosine ethyl ester
(Ty) in the presence of cerium oxide (CeO2) core particles.
Inspired by skin tanning, irradiating the CeO2@PTy core–shell
particles with UV or natural sunlight caused melanization by extending
the π-conjugated length of PTy, producing colloidal particles
with the ability to absorb light. The pellet samples consisting of
CeO2@PTy particles appeared whitish because of multiple
scattered light. In contrast, the light absorption capacity of CeO2@PTy UV or CeO2@PTy Sun particles after light irradiation
suppressed scattered light, dramatically improving the visibility
of the structural color of the pellet samples made from these particles.
Thus, a new method has been developed to control the visualization
of structural colors to the human eye by irradiating the melanin precursor
polymer with light.
An inverse opal structure was created using artificial melanin particles composed of a polystyrene core and a polydopamine shell as the template. The melanin-mimicking polydopamine that remained inside the inverse opal structure effectively absorbed multiple scattered light, producing bright structural color that was reversibly changed by solvent penetration.
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