Fiorenzo Omenetto 
Business

Reverse-engineering silk for modern days

In this segment, we look at business-themed documentaries, biopics, podcasts and TedTalks that are worth your time in the weekend.

migrator

Chennai

How does one go about reinventing a material that has been around for more than 5,000 years? Fiorenzo G Omenetto’s ground-breaking research on silk opens possibilities that could have until now been relegated to the league of science fiction. The key components of silk are just water and protein.

And that’s what makes it sustainable – being processed all in water and at room temperature. It’s biodegradable and one can watch it dissolve instantaneously in a glass of water or have it stable for years. Omenetto tells us that it’s edible, implantable in the human body without causing any immune response.” In fact, it even gets reintegrated in the body.


Reinventing the use cases of silk involves reverse engineering the material, just like it’s done in the textile industry, where the cocoons are unwound, following which the fibres are used to weave exquisite creations. Omenetto explains that silk has some wonderful qualities including being able to interface with microelectronics and nano-scale technology. This essentially means that one can replicate even information from a DVD or an optical storage device onto a silk surface. But the versatility of the material is not limited to films oroptical storage.


Omenetto explains this as, “If you’re afraid of going to the doctor and getting stuck with a needle, we do microneedle arrays. You can do gears, nuts and bolts. And the gears work in water as well. So, you can think of alternative mechanical parts. Maybe you can use that liquid Kevlar if you need something strong to replace peripheral veins, for example, or maybe an entire bone in the human body.” The engineer makes a strong case for the use of silk as medical devices and implants as well. Its biodegradable and biocompatible nature allows one to implant it in the body without needing to retrieve what is implanted.

Ted talk corner

Source: ted.com/talks/fiorenzo_omenetto_silk_the_ancient_material_of_the_future

Synopsis: Fiorenzo Omenetto, a biomedical engineer’s research spans non-linear optics, nano-structured materials (such as photonic crystals and photonic crystal fibers), biomaterials and biopolymer-based photonics. Most recently, he’s working on high-tech applications for silk.

Omenetto shares more than 20 astonishing new uses for silk, one of nature’s most elegant materials – in transmitting light, improving sustainability, adding strength and making medical leaps and bounds. On stage, he shows a few intriguing items made of the versatile stuff.

Visit news.dtnext.in to explore our interactive epaper!

Download the DT Next app for more exciting features!

Click here for iOS

Click here for Android

Pongal kit: Tamil Nadu govt scraps iris scan at PDS shops, elderly hit

Mylapore Festival: Rediscovering cultural history through temple domes

From books to birdies: Kaakai Koodu takes children closer to nature with books

Chennai: Students of Swaami Vivekananda school hold rally for smoke-free Bhogi

Tamil Nadu: Owning jallikattu bull a symbol of pride