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Biologically Inspired
Synthetic Gecko Adhesives
News- Sep. 2008
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Self Cleaning Gecko Adhesive (Sep. 2008)
First synthetic gecko
adhesive which cleans itself during use, as the natural gecko does.
After contamination by microspheres, the microfiber array loses all
adhesion strength. After repeated contacts with clean glass, the
microspheres are shed, and the fibers recover 30% of their original
adhesion. The fibers have a non-adhesive default state, which
encourages particle removal during contact.
Contact Self-Cleaning of Synthetic Gecko Adhesive, Langmuir 2008 |
Before and after repeated contacts.
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Overview of Gecko Adhesion Project
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Geckos have the remarkable ability to run at any orientation
on just
about any smooth or rough, wet or dry, clean or dirty surface. The
basis for geckos' adhesive properties is in the millions of
micron-scale setae on each toe of the gecko form a self-cleaning dry
adhesive. The tip of each seta consists of 100 to 1000 spatulae only
100 nanometers in diameter. Our interdisciplinary team of biologists
and engineers has been working since 1998 developing models for how the
natural
nanostructures function in a hierachical combination of spatulae,
spatular stalks, setal stalks, setal arrays, and toe mechanics, and
developing nanofabrication processes which allow large arrays
of hair patches to be economically fabricated.
Keywords: synthetic gecko adhesion, gecko adhesive, gecko tape
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Synthetic Gecko Nano Hair Properties |
Using insights from biological models, our work in the gecko hair
project aims to develop mechanical models
for gecko hair adhesion and then to design and fabricate
a synthetic gecko hair array. Work by Autumn (MRS Bulletin 2007) has
identified seven benchmark
functional properties of the gecko adhesive system:
- anisotropic attachment,
- high pulloff to preload ratio,
- low detachment force,
- material independence / van der Waals adhesion,
- self-cleaning,
- anti-self matting, and
- non-sticky default state.
The low detachment force, self-cleaning, and non-sticky default state suggest hard polymers, rather than the soft polymers
typically
used in pressure sensitive adhesives.
As reported in 2002, [Sitti and Fearing 2002]
and Autumn et al [2002]
we have made synthetic spatulae, which have shown adhesion
similar to natural spatulae in the range of 100-300 nN.
These patches of bumps lacked the setal stalks, and achieved
adhesion forces on the order of a few milliNewtons on an
area of a square centimeter.
In 2003, we fabricated high density arrays of spatular stalks
[Campolo et al 2003] which showed adhesion in shear
on the order of 0.5 Newton per sq. cm. In 2006, we demonstrated a novel
high friction array of 0.6 micron fibers
which showed shear resistance of 4 Newton per sq. cm. with only 0.8
Newton per sq. cm. of normal load. In 2007, we showed how the
polypropylene fiber arrays can provide shear force without a normal
load being present.
The final goal is to build arrays incorporating the necessary
geometrical features which have similar adhesion to geckos, about 10
Newtons per square centimeter. |
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(left) Anolis Equistris, length 23 micron, diameter 0.5 micron
(right) polyimide synthetic gecko adhesive, length 22 micron, diameter
0.6 micron |
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Interesting Facts about Gecko Adhesion
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Gecko toes are not ``sticky'' like tape.
If you touch a gecko toe it feels soft and smooth, and not sticky at
all.
If you pressed a gecko toe onto a hard surface it would not stick.
The toe will only adhere when the microfibers (setae) are engaged, by
dragging
or sliding the toe parallel to the surface. (If toes were sticky like
tape, it would be difficult for a gecko to walk
or run, as it would be too hard to pull its feet up.)
more gecko facts ...
There are many groups starting to work on ``gecko-inspired''
adhesive materials. A summary of the main results are given in synthetic gecko adhesive
comparison .
It is important to note that the natural gecko adhesive is
characterized by very low preloads and peel
strength, which is needed for climbing. (Much of the synthetic work is
aimed at achieving different characteristics
than the natural gecko adhesive, such as large normal forces.)
A brief synopsis of the history gecko-inspired synthetic adhesives
is here.
Progress in Gecko-inspired Synthetic Adhesion
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Self Cleaning Gecko Adhesive (Sep. 2008)
First synthetic gecko
adhesive which cleans itself during use, as the natural gecko does.
After contamination by microspheres, the microfiber array loses all
adhesion strength. After repeated contacts with clean glass, the
microspheres are shed, and the fibers recover 30% of their original
adhesion.
Contact Self-Cleaning of Synthetic Gecko Adhesive, Langmuir 2008 |
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Adhesion of Elastic Plate to a Sphere (Feb. 2008)
Adhesion of even a thin
membrane to a non-developable surface, such as a sphere, requires
stretching as well as bending. Dividing contacts into small plates
reduces membrane strain and increases adhesion.
Adhesion of an elastic plate to a sphere, Proc. Royal Soc. A 2008
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Directional gecko adhesive (Jan. 2008)
First easy attach, easy release, and directional synthetic
gecko adhesive using hard polymer microfibers. Microfiber array using
42 million polypropylene microfibers per square centimeter. Patches
can support 9 N/sq.cm. in estimated contact region with preload of just
0.1N/sq.cm.
Sliding-induced
adhesion
of stiff polymer, Interface 2008 |
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Shear adhesion from polypropylene microfibers (2007)
Shear adhesion of 0.1 N/sq.cm. using 0.6 micron polypropylene fiber
array. Normal preload required was less than 0.05 N/sq. cm [Schubert et
al. Jnl. of Adhesion Sci. and Tech. 2007]. |
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High friction from polypropylene microfibers (2006)
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Side contact model for fiber adhesion (2005)
Analysis of fiber adhesion in side contact.
[Majidi, Groff, Fearing J. Appl. Phys 2005] shows that
sufficiently long fibers, e.g. carbon nanotubes can stably make side
contact. This side contact can give 10-20 times greater adhesion force
than a hemispherical tip contact.
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Verification of side-side contact clumping (2004)
Fiber density is limited by clumping- both tip-tip at larger gaps
between fibers and side-side for closer fibers. A square lattice is
predicted to have better clumping resistance. Polyimide fibers (0.6
micron diameter) showing clumping behavior.
[Majidi, Groff, Fearing 2004]. |
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Effect of surface roughness on adhesion strength (2003)
Surface
roughness significantly reduces adhesion strength of fibrillar
adhesives. A cantilever fiber model predicts a drop in adhesion by a
factor of 5 when surface roughness increased from 1 to 15 um.
[Campolo, Jones, Fearing IEEE Nano 2003]
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High density nanofibers (2003)
Using a casting process
in a template, polyurethane hairs 200 nm diameter and 60 micron long
were fabricated. Due to clumping, adhesion force was limited.
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Synthetic spatula array (2002)
Synthetic spatula array from nano-indenting and casting.
Approximately 200-300 nN adhesion force was measured per spatula. Total area of array was less than 100x100 sq. um. [Sitti and Fearing IEEE Nano 2002]
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Rubber micro stalk array (2002)
Array of silicone rubber stalks, each 6 um in diameter and 6 um height
demonstrated 0.003 N/sq. cm. adhesion and 60 nN adhesion per stalk.[Sitti and Fearing IEEE Nano 2002] |
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Synthetic spatula (2002)
Single spatula were constructed from silicone rubber (E ~ 0.5 MPa)
and polyester (E ~ 1000 MPa) by using nano-indentation and casting.
Using atomic force microscope, 290 nN pulloff force was measured from
a single polyester spatula with tip radius of 350 nN, and 180 nN for
silicone rubber. The similarity of pulloff forces supports the hypothesis
of material independence for gecko adhesives.
[Autumn et al. PNAS 2002] |
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Sponsored by NSF
NIRT:
``Biologically Inspired Synthetic Gecko Adhesives'' (2003-2008).
NSF Disclaimer:
``This material is based upon work supported by the National Science
Foundation
under Grant No. EEC-0304730. Any opinions, findings and conclusions or
recommendations expressed in this material are those of the author(s)
and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National Science
Foundation
(NSF).'' (previous sponsorship by DARPA (1999-2003) "Biomimetic Climbers" .)
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