VDI 6221 Blatt-1 2013-09 PDF
Name in English:
STB VDI 6221 Blatt-1 2013-09
Name in Russian:
STB VDI 6221 Blatt-1 2013-09
Original standard VDI 6221 Blatt-1 2013-09 in PDF full version. Additional info + preview on request
Full title and description
STB VDI 6221 Blatt-1 2013-09 — "Bionik / Biomimetics - Biomimetic surfaces". Guidance for product and technology developers on designing and applying biologically inspired surface solutions (e.g., riblet drag-reduction and Lotus Effect® self‑cleaning) to technical surfaces and boundary‑layer functionalizations.
Abstract
This guideline defines the concept, examples, and development basis for biomimetic surfaces. It introduces terms and definitions, presents characteristic surface systems inspired by biology, and sets out criteria and a process framework to help engineers identify, evaluate and apply biological principles to surface design for improved functionality (drag reduction, self‑cleaning, wetting control, etc.).
General information
- Status: Current / Active.
- Publication date: September 2013 (2013-09).
- Publisher: Verlag des Vereins Deutscher Ingenieure (VDI).
- ICS / categories: 07.080 (Surface engineering / Surface technology).
- Edition / version: Blatt 1, 2013-09.
- Number of pages: 20 pages.
Scope
Provides recommendations and a methodological basis for developers and engineers who want to transfer biological surface principles into technical products. The guideline covers identification of relevant biological effects, illustrative examples of biomimetic surface systems, foundational process steps for development, and criteria for assessing applicability and performance of surface functionalizations across sectors such as transport, marine, automotive, aerospace, textiles and coatings.
Key topics and requirements
- Definitions and terminology for biomimetic surfaces and related concepts.
- Illustrative examples of biomimetic surface systems (e.g., riblet effect, Lotus Effect® and other boundary‑layer functionalizations).
- Practical process framework: identifying biological models, abstraction of principles, technical translation and evaluation criteria.
- Criteria for assessing feasibility, functionality and energy/efficiency potential when applying biomimetic surface solutions.
- Normative references and bibliography to related biomimetics standards and ISO terminology/methodology documents.
Typical use and users
Used by product designers, R&D engineers, surface and coatings specialists, aerodynamicists/hydrodynamicists, materials scientists, and innovation teams in automotive, aerospace, marine, consumer products and industrial equipment who seek to improve surface functionality (drag reduction, self‑cleaning, anti‑fouling, wettability control) through biologically inspired design.
Related standards
Part of the VDI biomimetics series (VDI 6220–6225 and associated Blätter). Related documents and cross‑references include other VDI 622x parts and international biomimetics standards such as ISO 18458 (terminology, concepts and methodology) and ISO 18459 (structural optimization) which are referenced for methodology and terminology alignment.
Keywords
Biomimetics, biomimetic surfaces, bionics, surface functionalization, boundary layer, riblet, Lotus Effect, drag reduction, self‑cleaning, VDI 6221 Blatt 1.
FAQ
Q: What is this standard?
A: A VDI guideline (VDI 6221 Blatt 1, published September 2013) that presents concepts, examples and a development framework for biomimetic surfaces — how biological surface principles can be translated into technical applications.
Q: What does it cover?
A: It covers terminology, illustrative biomimetic surface systems, the basis of the design process and practical criteria to evaluate and implement biologically inspired surface solutions such as drag‑reducing riblets or self‑cleaning Lotus‑type coatings.
Q: Who typically uses it?
A: Product and technology developers, surface/coatings engineers, materials scientists, aerodynamic and hydrodynamic specialists, and R&D teams across automotive, aerospace, marine, industrial and consumer product sectors.
Q: Is it current or superseded?
A: The 2013 Blatt‑1 edition is listed as the current/active edition in VDI catalogues and standards databases; users should check VDI or national catalogues for any later revisions or newer Blätter before applying it to a safety‑critical design.
Q: Is it part of a series?
A: Yes — VDI 6221 is part of a broader biomimetics series (VDI 6220–6225 and related Blätter) addressing different aspects of biomimetic methodology, materials, structures, information processing and application domains.
Q: What are the key keywords?
A: Biomimetics, biomimetic surfaces, bionics, Lotus Effect, riblet, surface functionalization, boundary layer, drag reduction, self‑cleaning.