Biomimicry according to DIN EN ISO 18458
WHAT IS BIOmimicry?
Learning from the best research laboratory in the world: nature.
Biomimetics is a scientific discipline that analyses, abstracts and transfers structures, processes, and functional principles of biological systems. It’s not inspiration, it’s method.
The focus is not on the form of the model, but its functional principle: the active cause behind an observed performance. Biomimicry separates one from the other, systematically, documented and reproducible.
Since 2015, the international standard DIN EN ISO 18458 regulates this transmission process. It defines terms, methods and requirements and makes “biomimicry” a verifiable claim. For Scho & Müller, this standard is not only a reference, but a lived working basis. Each project follows the same methodical path: from the biological phenomenon to the abstraction to the technical solution.
„Biomimicry is not a game of engineering, but its oldest and at the same time most modern extension.”
AT A GLANCE
Term
Biomimicry
Artificial word from biology + imitation
Norm
DIN EN ISO 18458
Since 2015 · Concepts, Terms & Methods
Procedure
Top-down · Bottom-up
Two main directions of transmission
BASIC PRINCIPLES
Four guiding principles that distinguish biomimicry.
Not everything that looks like nature is biomimicry. These four principles are the methodological basis — and at the same time the dividing line to the pure natural metaphor.
Function over form
The principle of action is transmitted, not the appearance. A biomimetic solution must be allowed to look biologically unsimilar.
Abstraction is mandatory
There is always a step of generalisation between role model and technology. Without abstraction, copy remains.
Reproducible document
Each transmission follows a comprehensible path. ISO 18458 requires explicit document chains — from the phenomenon to the component.
Interdisciplinary constructed
Biologists and engineers work on an equal footing. A discipline alone produces either beautiful images or weak models.
HOW DOES THE METHOD WORK?
The biomimetic transmission Process
According to ISO 18458, biomimicry runs neither linear nor free — but as a guided iteration between biological model and technical application.
Observe
Identify biological phenomenon — through fieldwork, literature or research databases such as AskNature.
Analyse
What physical, chemical or geometric mechanisms contribute to the performance of the organism?
Abstract
Release the principle of action from the biological carrier. What remains if you take away the living?
Transfer
Embedding principle in the technical application — adapted to materials, scale and production.
Verify
In the experiment, prove that the performance is actually achieved in the technical context.
EXAMPLES FROM NATURE
Classics that show how bionics works.
Three translations that today explain the term bionics to every engineering degree program – and which all follow the same method pattern.

Lotus: Self-cleaning facades
The double structure of micropapillaes and wax crystals allows water to bed and dirt to carry away. Transferred to facade colours, solar panels and medical surfaces.
Example · Nelumbo nucifera · since ~1990

Burdock: Resealable Connection
From dog fur observation 1941: Micro hooks of the plant hang in loops. The principle has been transferred unchanged and is one of the most successful bionics products ever.
Example · Arctium lappa · since 1955

Shark: Fluid-optimised skin
Microscopic longitudinal groots reduce the frictional resistance of turbulent flow by up to 10%. Today in swimsuits, airplane wings and rotor blades.
Example · Carcharhinus · since ~1985
STANDARDS & FURTHER SOURCES
On what basis we work.
NORM
DIN EN ISO 18458 (2015)
Bionics — concepts and methods. Beuth Publishing.
Guideline
VDI 6220 Blatt 1 (2012)
Biomimicry — Conceptualisation and Strategy.
Data bank
AskNature.org · Biomimicry Institute
Function-oriented search for biological role models.
NORM
DIN EN ISO 18459 (2015)
Structure optimisation by biomimicry— procedures and terms.
Book
Nachtigall, W.: Bionik — Basics and examples
Springer, 2002. Standard work of German biomimicry.
Association
BIOKON e.V.
Competence Network Biomimetics — Research & Industry.
Contact
Ready for your next project?
We look forward to your inquiry — whether concrete project, open question or first idea.
